Blog

  • Contrasting Vision

    In one of my previous posts I encouraged people to abandon #000 as copy text colour in favour of lighter shades such as #333 or even #666, for example. In retrospect there are two things wrong with that post. First, I should not tell people what, or what not to do, even if my words were meant as a somewhat ironic, very much tongue-in-cheek statement. It is never my intention to communicate with such an attitude. Second, I wasn’t joking — even if ironic, I was somewhat serious. But was I right to make such a statement?

    (more…)

  • Design Eye for the Usability Guy

    If you have to name one usability guru out there that is in desperate need of
    a design makeover, who would you name? But of course, none other than Jakob
    Nielsen
    . Therefor, in the spirit of sharing, Andrei Herasimchuk decided to
    gather up some knowledgeable designers and help Nielsen with a little bit of design
    advice. The Design Fab Five.

    What a team we make: Andrei Herasimchuk,
    D. Keith Robinson, Cameron
    Moll
    , Greg Storey and myself. My role?
    Illustration and graphics. Time to spice up that content a little. But that’s
    not all — we’ve done the impossible: combine Nielsen and Flash (it
    even feels odd putting those two in the same sentence.) But what am I waffling?
    Take a look yourself and read
    this most entertaining and useful piece
    .

  • Weekend Reading (20)

  • Blogger. Templates. Designed.

    Note: My template set has been updated — get the scoop here »

    bloggerI’ve been waiting to write about this for months now. Really. Blogger has finally relauched with a snazzy new look courtesy of Douglas Bowman and Adaptive Path. The new Blogger features not only a nicer, rounder design, but also a much-improved process for creating and managing blogs — and a bevy of fresh templates designed by some familiar names.

    Brand Name Designers

    Doug recruited some terrific designers to design and style brand new, standards-based templates for the relaunch (in addition to the fine templates he contributed), and I was honored to be one of this select group: Dan Cederholm, Todd Dominey, Dave Shea and Jeffrey Zeldman all created some fantastic designs for the new templates (view a list of all the template designs).

    Beautifully Generic

    The trick with this project was to design something visually fetching, but not too personal (the primary function is a reusable template, which might display many different types of content), yet individual enough to inspire someone to actually use it.

    “Your templates really stand out to me as having a personality while still presenting a ‘generic’ feel…” Dan Benjamin

    My primary goal was to design a base template that would work in many situations, for many different people. The best way to accomplish this from the outset was to limit the color palette to similar hues, which also made it easier to create alternate color schemes that have a fairly different look without having to change any of the base elements:

    For the design, I wanted to play a little with gradients, as well as try some layering of background elements in CSS to create subtle effects (as it turned out, they are extremely subtle). I ended up applying gradients to every primary element, though chances are you won’t notice them all right away.

    The subtle gradients gently direct the eye down the page, and create the slight decrease in contrast of the background arrows in the sidebar as they move further down the page (getting closer to the darker color of the gradient).

    Standards for the People

    The number of people who will make use of these templates is astounding (it’s already started), and the web is going to be a much better place for the effort (just think of the hundreds of thousands of sites that will soon be using well-designed standards-based markup!). I’m very happy with how Thisaway turned out, especially the alternate colors. I think it fits in nicely with the look and feel of the new Blogger (though that was entirely accidental, since none of us saw the design before Sunday), and compliments the other new designs while remaining unique.

    Congratulations, kudos and thanks to Ev and the rest of the Blogger crew, as well as Doug and the folks at Adaptive Path for allowing such a terrific team of designers to contribute to this project.

    Blogger template questions? Please search and/or post to the official Blogger Help Google Group—you are much more likely to get a response there than by emailing me.