Journal of David Atlee @ Frozen Designs

David Atlee designs and builds websites, takes photos, plays with digital design and writes stories about odd things.
 
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    Stage 2 – Website Layout

    Friday, January 22nd, 2010

    For those who read my last post, you know I have been revamping my portfolio website over the last week using a new work process of content, then layout and finally the design. The process has worked really well so far for the build of the landing page and I have noticed how this process has changed how I coded the CSS.

    You can see the progression here from content only to layout (please ignore the lurid colour scheme, it is there just to show the different elements and how they fit together).

    I have traditionally always used the ‘position’ tag in CSS and then used co-ordinates be it relative or fixed (those who know CSS will understand me), but think about telling a element such as an image to sit in specific place or in relation to something it follows on from. This tended to always give me more problems later on and find myself with gaps later on where the element originally sat. But this layout has none of that, and I have done better coding to make things sit where I want them to. I found it alot easier to understand how to do this, make the HTML changes and get the logic in my head as I did not have to concern myself with fiddle-some design elements at this stage.

    The other advantage is that I have hit far fewer compatibility issues between different browsers. It would be nice if all browsers worked the same when rendering a webpage, but they don’t and often you hit issues between how your webpage looks in Firefox, Internet explorer, Chrome, Safari and Opera. The biggest culprit being Internet Explorer, which due to most workplaces using it is still one of the most used browsers. The cleaner code has given me a more stable layout and the only issue I have dicovered so far lies with the twitter app I have used. I would love to have a stripped down feed via feedburner like my journal you are reading now, imagine tales and google shared articles feed, but for some reason trying to put an rss twitter feed in requires a login and password, so if anyone has a suggestion I would be grateful to hear from you.

    So with the layout nicely tucked away, I can move onto the design stage and get my creative juices flowing. Whilst builidng the layout, little light bulbs kept lighting up above my head as the shape began to form. I did have a basic idea in mind, but as I saw how it  fitted together I could see the work space I had for being very artistic in Photoshop and the areas where I would need to rely on the CSS to aid the design. So if you look at the screen shot below, I have outlined in red the areas I can make the design flow and bring the page together. I will be able to design in a way that will draw the user to the areas I want, aiding the usability of my website and so the over all experience.

    The red outlined area is the space I can use for the funky design stuff

    For along time now all these elements of building a website compatibility, usability, accessibility and awesome design seemed so much to think about when I built a website, but using this method of content >> layout >>design makes these things come naturally as you go through each stage and suddenly all becomes alot clearer. I am sure with each new website I build I will discover new revelations, but then it always good to progress and understand.

    The next stage forthe build will be to split the design into two sections, firstly still working in the layout area I will change the colours, fonts and link styles. This will give me a rough idea of the feel of the website and also give me definate sizes of areas, from there I can design and bring in the art to compliment. But before I gey on with these elements, a mood board or three.

    Till next time.

    Read Part 3 – Inspiration Boards

    Read Part 1 – Website Redesign and Content Driven Design

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    Stage 1 – Website Redesign and content driven design

    Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

    I recently decided to revamp my website and content as it was finally time I got off the fence between being a web designer and developer. Web technology and trends have changed massively in the last year with AJAX making headway, CSS3 and HTML5 being born too. So know there is only so much one man can learn, I need to concentrate on what I wanted and what I loved. I have traditionally always lived in the front-end development side of things and love created websites through layout. So design was really the bit I loved and I want to expand on that. With an excellent knowledge of HTML and CSS, a good understanding of what AJAX can do I can offer design with the idea of the needed functionality. I have always flirted with design, but never to the level that you see around us. It is time I fixed that and so with concentrated efforts to see the best out there was born the idea of frozendesigns.co.uk V7 ( I am currently on V5, but I abandoned V6 as I did more research, I got better ideas).

    Through my google reader feed where I seek daily inspiration and current trends I came across this article about how designing a website should be content driven and so logically built using content as the base, then onto layout and finally the look and feel. Makes perfect sense, but industry has always designed static images in Photoshop first. Whilst at first it makes sense for resources and giving the client an idea of the concept, there are numerous issues involved. These include how fonts render and also trying to make content fit the design, so later on changes have to be made to the design. This format of working is residue left over when content, design and layout were all held on the same page. Today the design and layout are separate, which means you can nail down the content and functionality tesing early on  then build the layout around the content, experiment with the how users read the website, then improve on that with effective design methods to drive website users where you want them, be it looking a some nice photos, buying a toy car or socially interacting.

    The other advantages of the ‘content – layout – design’ process is you can take care of those often under-rated issues of accessibility easily. Imagine someone was listening to your website being read out, it needs to make sense and often the layout and design is relied on to help it make sense, no good for someone who is blind. So when you add content without layout or design you naturally order it to make sense. Bingo! Along with certain other attributes in the code like image descriptions, headings and keyboard shortcuts your website becomes more accessible, which in turn also helps search engines get the best information out of your site. It really does make sense.

    So frozendesigns.co.uk v7 then, well I am on day 2 of my two week leave from my job as a ‘Web Project’ bod to rebuild/redesign my website and I am already seeing the advantages.  I first listed what I wanted on the site (using my wonderful wipeboard), what would be on the landing page and the menu/website structure. As I began to add content, at this stage mostly just feeds from my twitter account, journal, google reader shared items and creative writing website ‘imaginetales.co.uk‘ ideas of the layout have formed, a natural way for it all to sit together.  I still have more content to add with a summary about what the purpose of the website is along with featured design/photography I have created. Then I can play with layout and finally the even more fun exciting bit of design and making it look awesome. From there I can take the layout and design to the child pages and also my wordpress powered blog to bring that into my website. Up till now I have used templates by others, now I need to use my own.

    You can see my progression here and I will posting more on my journal as my journey to build my site and become a better web designer continues.

    Till next time…

    Read part 2 – Website Layout

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    Smoke

    Tuesday, March 24th, 2009
    Scary Smoke - © Stoffel De Roover / Lumendipity Photography

    Scary Smoke - © Stoffel De Roover / Lumendipity Photography

    I found some amazing photo manipulations by Lumendipity. Using photos of smoke he has taken, he has created some amazing imagery in photoshop, now on display for the world in his smoke photography gallery.

    His images really capture my imagination, the smoke is hauntingly ethereal and entices you to stare deep into the layers. You could easily mistake the whole image to be digitally created from scratch and when you come across life imitating digital art (with a little help), you have to take a a second look. Truly inspirational! My personal favourite is the ‘Scary Smoke‘ shown here, I can imagine that different people will see different things, a psychologists perception dream!

    The artist gives an excellent interview at digital-photography-school.com with the added bonus of techniques. So people like me can grab some joss sticks and their camera and try it out for themselves. I’ll let you know when I have some decent results.

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