Posts Tagged ‘web design’

A Look Into: Black and White in Design

Black and white are too of the most emotive visuals in nature. Polar opposites, the two seem to stand for opposing metaphors, as well. Black is usually seen as dark, a symbol of authority and power, and, occasionally, as a symbol of evil. White is a sign of purity and brightness and of a natural innocence that combats its opponent.

black white zebra strips A Look Into: Black and White in Design
(Image source: Fotolia)

The real benefit of these two shades is to meld together in a contrasting design. Using such a stark dichotomy, you immediately establish a dynamic in the design that is impossible for the viewer to ignore. It is clean, can be either simple or complex, and has endless opportunities that other color schemes just don’t manage to generate. It all just balances itself out.

Many graphic designers today see that the best way to stick out in today’s full color world is not to join them but to set themselves apart by refusing to follow the norm. Duality has become the name of the game, giving us every reason to try it ourselves to see the effect.

Let’s take a look at how black-and-white designs are being used in various graphics, with great success.

You may also be interested in:

Product Packaging Design

1300 on Fillmore
This specialty food product is a line created for the 1300 on Fillmore restaurant, run by chef David Lawrence. Each bottle design features a simple black-and-white picture of his hands as they work with various ingredients, each one related to the item itself.

1300 on fillmore A Look Into: Black and White in Design

For example, you see Lawrence handling cornmeal for the jalapeno cornbread mix or dicing garlic cloves for the roasted garlic and bacon vinaigrette. The design is elegant and effective, without any color at all. It looks even more striking against the clear bottles of liquid dressings that have their own, natural color.

Henry (Lagarde)
This Argentinian wine is already well known throughout Europe for its taste. But the packaging needed to be just as memorable. Using a black bottle instead of the traditional, shaded green glass, they used both a black-and-white label and a matching box.

Henry A Look Into: Black and White in Design

There are two different lines of the boxes, one that is black with white font and one that is white with black font, featuring a black-and-white picture of a cluster of grapes on a vine as the only decoration. The slight reddish color of the foil on the bottle works well with this design.

Scent Stories
Probably the greatest example of black-and-white packaging, Scent Stories is a product line of perfumes made as a personal project by Ah&Oh Studio. It is based on four famous authors: Edgar Allan Poe, Marquise de Sade, George Orwell and Pierre de Laclos.

scent stories A Look Into: Black and White in Design

scent stories 02 A Look Into: Black and White in Design

Each scent was tailored to the tone of the writers’ stories, with a small explanation of each on the packaging. On the back of each bottle is a snippet from the authors’ most well known stories. Then, the bottles were topped with finely crafted busts for each. For de Sade it is a screaming women, for Poe a grinning skull, for Orwell a pig and for de Laclos a faceless, wigged aristocrat.

More: Showcase of 50 Black & White Creative Package Designs

Website Design

Marcin Kaniewski Photography
This photographer has implemented a really brilliant design for his website. Not only does it use the beautiful contrast of black and white very effectively, going so far as to remove all color from even the thumbnails, but it acts as a portfolio as well.

marcin kaniewski photography A Look Into: Black and White in Design

Each image features one of Kaniewski’s photographs, which can be viewed by clicking for a larger image. You can also change the background from black to gray or white.

Subtraction
Subtraction is the website for social collage app Mixel, created by former New York Times design editor Khoi Vinh. He took an interesting approach to the main image by using his large black dog as the featured subject. Then, he built the rest of the site in black and white around it.

subtraction A Look Into: Black and White in Design

The unique factor here is not the design itself but the way Vinh manages to make the contrast appear friendly and warm rather than the usual intensity the dual shades create.

2otsu
This portfolio site for a graphic design group has been featured on a number of lists for best overall concept. Available in both Flash and HTML, it uses viewer interaction to great effect. You start by deciding what format you want to view it in. Everything at this point is black and white.

2otsu A Look Into: Black and White in Design

Then, it takes you to the main page and has you select what color you want for the interface. From there, you are directed to the now customized list of fast, scrolling portfolio images, which are black and white until you click on them and they expand in full color.

More: Showcase Of Beautiful Black And White Websites

Logo Design

Culinary Zen
The black background with the white text and image is very direct and well made. It is impossible not to have your eyes immediately drawn to it as a whole rather than any particular part of the logo.

culinary zen A Look Into: Black and White in Design

The use of the "C" doubling as a plate is another nice touch that brings it all together by giving the image itself more relevance to the actual name, not just the focus of the company.

Silent Monkey
Unlike the logo above, Silent Monkey uses a white background to give the image more light and brevity. The cartoon ape in the center is cute and simple, and the lack of a mouth brings the image together with the name very effectively.

silent monkey A Look Into: Black and White in Design

The text is extremely small, which is actually a benefit, as it makes the words seem somehow quieter, as though they are being whispered to the viewer.

Fashion Australia
Not all shades have to be so bold, and actually, using intermediate colors is a good idea for less stark logos. This one uses a dark gray that softens the image. It works well with the only color in the logo, which is a pink bowtie on the kangaroo.

fashion australia A Look Into: Black and White in Design

It is also a softened version of a brighter shade, mixing it beautifully.

More: 35 Stunning Black And White Logos

Conclusion

Black and white are two of the most useful shades you can find for any design project. What are some of your own favorite examples of black-and-white design?

Tell us in the comments.

Should You Keep Your Website Open Source?


When you enter the world of web hosting, you will find yourself inundated with options. Choosing a hosting company is only the beginning. Even after you have a domain, hosting account, and all of the preliminary tasks out of the way, you still have to build a website. Many options out there are proprietary, sold by commercial vendors and private developers, but in some situations, it is much better for your website and your business to use free and open source software for your website.

What Is Free and Open Source Software?

To fully grasp the importance of open source software, it is important to have a clear definition. Free and open source software is any software that is made available using a free software license (approved by the Free Software Foundation) or an open source license (approved by the Open Source initiative). Most free and open source licenses fit both lists and include clauses that allow users to copy the source code, modify it, and redistribute it to others. This does not necessarily exclude commercial software, since even free and open source software can still be sold.

How Can a Website Be Open Source?

When we talk about making a website open source, it does not refer to the HTML and CSS code, which is, by the open nature of the Web, always open source and available to everyone. On the other hand, many websites use server-side scripting to create dynamic web pages and web applications. In some cases, these scripts are from proprietary vendors or private contractors, but you can also get them from open source developers.

Some of the most successful and trusted websites use reliable free and open source content management systems, such as WordPress (for blogging), Drupal (for general website content management), and Magento (for e-commerce).

Why Go Open Source?

The most common reason for a website administrator to pick a tool like WordPress over something commercial is that it is free of charge. You do not have to pay a cent to download it and install it on any server. While there are commercial installation and management services available, these are completely optional, and the software remains free and open source even if you use them.

Beyond the initial cost, however, free and open source web software offers significant advantages, including the following:

Avoid Vendor Lock-in

If a vendor creates a complex proprietary web application for your website, you will always be dependent on that vendor for updates, customizations, and possibly even the safety of your data, which may be in a proprietary format. If you ever need to switch to another vendor, you may have serious conversion problems.

Full Customization

When you use free and open source software, it is yours to do with as you please. While other software may have limitations on the amount of customization you can do, an open source web application is like clay that you can mold into whatever you want.

Reliability and Security

As the old open source saying goes, “many eyes make bugs shallow.” It is easier for a community of developers to spot security flaws and fix bugs than it is for a commercial company with a closed development model.

Sustainability

This is especially true if you hire an independent developer to create a new application for you. If something should happen to that developer or you are no longer able to hire that person, you are left with software that no one at your organization truly understands how to develop or fix. With free and open source software, it continues to survive even if the developer does not. The source code remains available even if a vendor goes out of business.

The Open Web

There is one undeniable reason why it makes sense to use free and open source software for your website. The web was built on free and open source principles. The code of the web is free and open, and web standards call for websites to be open and accessible to everyone. Most of the top hosting providers offer free and open source software, and it only makes sense that your website should maintain the spirit of the web by keeping your site open.

You might also like…

Should Designers know how to code? What do you think? →
Is a Design House-Style Really Necessary? →



Things My Clients Hate. What about Yours?


I have been a freelancer for almost a decade now and in the course of these years, I have had dozens of clients and hundreds of projects. While no two clients are the same, I have noticed some common things many of my clients hate. For truth’s sake, I try to avoid these things, especially when I really value the client but sometimes the items on the list below are unavoidable.

Here are the Top 5 of things (my) clients hate:

1. Missed Deadlines

I am not quite sure if this is the thing my clients hate the most, especially having in mind that I relatively rarely miss deadlines simply because I have already learned not to leave a project to become urgent and very often we don’t even set a fixed deadline at all (i.e. it is more “You will have it done sometimes next week” rather than “You will have it done next Friday by 5 p.m.”), which gives me more flexibility to arrange my schedule, but based on what I know from other freelancers (and my own experiences on a couple of projects where I did miss the deadline), clients really hate it.

[Image Source]

I guess clients hate missed deadlines more when it is crucial. For instance, if you have to finish a design by a particular date because this date is set in stone as the beginning of a huge promotion campaign for the site, then it is really obvious while the client will get mad, if you miss the deadline. Fortunately, I have already learned that even when such projects pay more, these fixed deadlines are too much for me to take – not because I am not serious but simply because things happen and I might miss the deadline because of a something unpredictable, so I do take such projects only when I absolutely have to. After all, clients also need to learn to plan in advance and start a project early rather than in the last minute and make the freelancer’s life a real hell because the project is so urgent, urgent, urgent, and the world will end, if we miss the deadline.

2. Price Increase Mid-project

I understand a client (usually) has a budget for a project and he or she is not happy to go over it but it is quite common a project to get more complex or larger in size than what we initially estimated and in this case the price can’t stay the same. I know that some freelancers use this cheap trick to get clients – i.e. they quote a lower price and after the client is hooked, somewhere in the middle of the project, they announce additional charges and this makes clients cautious but not every freelancer plays that low.

Besides, if you fix the price (and above all – what it includes) in the contract, very often this solves the problem. Just make it clear to the client that the volume of work has changed and this is why you are increasing the price. Still, I am perfectly aware that this isn’t always possible and because of this I try to make the initial estimate as precise as possible, or break down a large project into smaller chunks and put prices for each of them.

[Image Source]

I really hate it when a client says to give him or her a final price without knowing exactly what the volume of work is. If the client is very pushy and shows no understanding to the fact that I can’t quote a final price when I don’t know how much work there is, we sometimes just part ways. I sometimes explain that his or her question about the final price sounds like, “How much does it cost to fill my basket with fruit?” It is the same basket but the price is different – it just depends on what fruit you put in it.

3. Poor Communication or Lack of It at All

I have rarely had clients who are mad at me because of poor communication (more, it is the other way round – I get mad at clients who answer weeks after I asked them something) simply because I know how vital good communication is but from what I have heard from clients and other freelancers, this is something clients really hate. Of course, I am not expected to answer real time and I did have some cases when clients were irritated for not getting an answer immediately but this is more an exception than a rule.

The case I am referring to was with an Australian client who probably didn’t know what time difference is. While she was bombarding me with emails, I was sleeping because in Europe it was still night. Am I expected to answer emails while I sleep?

[Image Source]

This is why, when I land a new client, I very often tell him or her that I usually respond to emails in 24 hours or less. Also, when I know (i.e. when it is planned ahead), I do tell in advance when I am not available (like, “I will be away for the weekend and will come home on Monday in the afternoon”), so that they don’t expect an answer from me. In all other cases, if I am late with the answer, presume an emergency has stricken or I have simply forgotten, so please shoot me another email to check if I am alive or not.

4. Unavailability

I don’t know why but I think clients presume a freelancer is available all the time. This is why when a freelancer is offered a project, he or she must gladly jump on it right away. Every now and then I do get such clients and I notice their irritation when I tell them I can’t be theirs, at least not right away. It’s very funny when I get approved for projects I have applied for months ago and get an enthusiastic message from the client, who probably expects I have spent all these months waiting for his or her approval and is very disappointed I am not interested anymore.

The clients I have been working for for years already know that I do have a schedule, very often a tight one at that, and it isn’t very likely to be available right away (though this happens, too but don’t presume this is very likely). I taught them they need to contact me at least a week in advance for a small project and two weeks or more, if the project will require more than 10 hours a week, so that I can adapt my schedule. Still, if my schedule is filled for weeks ahead, I might not be able to accommodate a large project and in this case I am fine if they find somebody else for the project.

5. “This Can’t Be Done!”

I know how it feels when you want something badly but you can’t have it and because of this I understand why my clients are unhappy, when something they want badly can’t be done. With clients, who are technically savvy, it is easier to explain that there are technical limitations and not everything they dream of can come true.

For instance, once I was designing a small site (6 or 7 pages, static HTML) for a client of mine, who was a one-man show in electronics retail. He had seen the site of a competitor of his (a huge multinational company) and wanted much of its functionality. I did manage to communicate that the competitor’s site uses much more complex technologies and in theory we could switch to them, if he really wanted to but this will increase the price 7 or 8 times.

[Image Source]

He was disappointed but at least he didn’t make a fuss about it, unlike another client of mine a couple of years ago who responded something like “You can’t do it?! But I thought you were a pro!” when he wanted something very complex and I told him that I doubted it could be done at all and for sure I couldn’t do it.

What about you?

There are clients and there are clients. Not everybody is irritated by the same things. However, I presume it is not only my clients, who hate these things and it will be interesting to hear what other fellow freelancers have to say about what their clients hate. Care to share your experience? What do YOUR clients hate?



A Showcase of Typography in Webdesign


Functional web typography is, of course, key to the usabilty of any website. But functional does not mean boring.
Big, loud and attention grabbing typography does have the presence and magnificence to truly grab the attention of your visitors.
It does not quite shout at your readers, it merely says with a slighlt harder-overtone ‘Look at ME!’.
Its effect can be impressive and memorable.

Today we have a creative and exciting collection of websites who do you use, and succesfully so, big type TO GET THEIR MESSAGE ACROSS!

Hope you find some inspiration for them.

Denise Chandler

Denise Chandler

Me In Motion

Plain and apparent typography with all the letters capitalized to catch the user’s attention.

Me In Motion

Amazeelabs

Amazeelabs

Barney Funk

A moderately sized font combined with red gives a very powerful message to your viewers.

Barney Funk

Justdot

Justdot

Glitch

Simple, clear and attractive typography.

Glitch

Bowtie Period

Bowtie Period

Takeshape

Takeshape

We Shoot Bottles

We Shoot Bottles

Ipolecat

Ipolecat

Cupcake Creative Studio

Cupcake Creative Studio

Git Tower

Git Tower

Fore Father Group

Fore Father Group

Efingo

Efingo

Marie Catribs

Marie Catribs

Stephen Caver

Stephen Caver

Rich Brown

Rich Brown

Finch

Finch

Brunet-Garcia

Brunet-Garcia

Diegolatorre

Diegolatorre

Pieoneers

Pieoneers

Thealbany

Thealbany

Wooconcept

Wooconcept

Rvlt

Rvlt

72ave

72ave

Moozedesign

Moozedesign

Tokyodigital

Tokyodigital

Weareacademy

Weareacademy

Robedwards

Robedwards

Elysium Burns

Elysium Burns

Teez

Teez

Make Photoshop Faster

Make Photoshop Faster

Bills

Bills

Visualbox

visualbox

Gapmedics

Gapmedics

Notorious Design

Notorious Design

Markboulton Design

Markboulton Design

Wordit

wordit

Polar Gold

polar gold

Yudisign

Yudisign

Fuelfuture

Fuelfuture

Sabotagepkg

Sabotagepkg

Gritti Rollo

Gritti Rollo

Cassius

Cassius

You might also like…

50 Examples of Large Photography Backgrounds within Web Design →
50 Examples of Creative 404 – Page Not Found Pages →
A Showcase of 50 Amazing Personal Blog Web Designs →
50 Creative Examples of Illustrations in Web Design →
50 Professional Web Design Agency Web Sites →
50 Bright and Vibrant Web Designs – Color Inspiration →
50 Impressive Magazine and Newspaper Styled Web Designs →
50 Inspirational and Fresh Minimally Designed Web Sites →
50 Creative and Inspirational Personal Portfolio Websites →
50 Inspiring Web Application and Service Web Site Designs →



Freebie: Colorful 3D UI Kit


We have a fantastic freebie for all of you web designers out there, you’ll love this:)
Designed by Land-of-Web, the Colorful 3D UI Kit comes in .psd format and is full of beautifully designed modern web elements covering almost all aspects of web design, including:

• Drop-Downs, Silders & Progress Bars
• Switches, Tabs, Icons, Tool-Tips and many useful Navigation Elements
• Search and Select Boxes
• Media Control Buttons and Mini Player

UI Kit Preview

Colorful 3D UI Kit

Download the UI Kit

Within the .zip file you will find all of the .psd elements from above.
Download: Colorful 3D UI Kit

Copyright

This Web UI set is free for personal and commercial use with attribution appreciated but not required. You MAY NOT re-upload or re-distribute this set on any other website, and please link directly to this page for all sharing.

Thanks

Big thank you to Nataly from Land-of-Web for designing and allowing us to release this fantastic freebie. You can also follow her on Twitter.

You might also like…

Fantastic Freebie: 3D Web UI Kit →
20 Free Web UI Element Kits and Stencils →
A Collection of Printable Web Browser Sketching and Wireframe Templates →
10 Completely Free Wireframe and Mockup Applications →
A Collection of Useful Web Design Wireframing Resources →
40 Detailed and High Quality Mobile Phone .psd Source Files →
40 Professional and Detailed Web Layout PSD Templates →
Android App Developers GUI Kits, Icons, Fonts and Tools →
iPhone and iPad Development GUI Kits, Stencils and Icons →
Illustrator Template Toolbox for Web, Mobile and App Developers →
40 High Quality CSS and XHTML Web Layout Templates →