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Contact Information Penny McIntire Published by New Riders VisualDesignModernWeb.com [email protected] © June 2008 Penny McIntire 1 Ten Tips for Web Design Alchemy by Penny McIntire Department of Computer Science Northern Illinois University © June 2008 Penny McIntire Introduction • Alchemy: from the old French alkemie and the Arabic al-kimia: “the art of transformation.” • Medieval alchemy blurred the lines between science, art, and magic in its search to transform common metals into gold. • A beautifully designed web site may not be medieval gold, but it is indeed magical. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 3 What Is Style? “Style: A simple way of saying complicated things.” Jean Cocteau © June 2008 Penny McIntire 4 What Does Shopping Have to Do with Web Design? © June 2008 Penny McIntire 5 What Does Shopping Have to Do with Web Design? © June 2008 Penny McIntire 6 Tip #1 Support Wayfinding • Provide “You Are Here!” markers: – Site titles. (You are in the mall.) – Page titles. (You are in the south edge of the mall.) – Current link, disabled but not removed. (You’re at the front door of Macy’s.) • Navigation should provide a mental model of the site. (Where is Macy’s in regard to the other stores in the mall?). © June 2008 Penny McIntire 7 What Does Architecture Have to Do with Web Design? © June 2008 Penny McIntire 8 Tip #2 “Architect” a Website’s Layout • Align sight lines. • Repeat shapes. • Repeat proportions. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 9 What Does Poster Design Have to Do with Web Design? © June 2008 Penny McIntire 10 Tip #3 Provide a Visual Hierarchy • Divide. • Chunk. • Emphasize. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 11 What Do Rose Windows Have to Do with Web Design? • Following my Medieval analogy, I’m using the form of a Medieval rose window as a color wheel. • RGB: Red, Green, & Blue © June 2008 Penny McIntire 12 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works • Web color codes: #RRGGBB, in hex (base 16) – 0-9 – A-F (10-15) • Maximum saturation (intensity) = FF (256) • No color = 00 • Thus… © June 2008 Penny McIntire 13 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works #000000 #FFFFFF #FF0000 #00FF00 #0000FF #FF00CC #CCFF00 #00CCFF © June 2008 Penny McIntire 14 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works • Terminology: • Value = degree of lightness or darkness light value dark value • Saturation = intensity fully saturated © June 2008 Penny McIntire less saturated 15 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works • Tint: a color mixed with white tint of red • Shade: a color mixed with black shade of red • Tone: a color mixed with gray tone of red © June 2008 Penny McIntire 16 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works • Virtually all computers these days can display 16,777,256 colors. • Websafe colors: 216 colors safe on all computers, even on older ones. • No longer limited to websafe colors, yet palettes provided in graphics packages are still typically only websafe colors. • For example… © June 2008 Penny McIntire 17 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Adobe’s Color Cubes Palette © June 2008 Penny McIntire 18 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Adobe’s Swatches/Continuous Tone Palette © June 2008 Penny McIntire 19 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Adobe’s System Color Palette © June 2008 Penny McIntire 20 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Visibone Palette visibone.com © June 2008 Penny McIntire 21 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works My palette (on web site) © June 2008 Penny McIntire 22 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works White in center Black on outside © June 2008 Penny McIntire 23 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Fully saturated colors on black inner hexagon and outside “tips.” © June 2008 Penny McIntire 24 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Tints © June 2008 Penny McIntire 25 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Shades © June 2008 Penny McIntire 26 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works Tones on “wings” © June 2008 Penny McIntire 27 Tip #4 Understand How Web Color Works • But a palette on the screen can’t show 16 million colors… How do we find the rest? • Various ways… © June 2008 Penny McIntire 28 Tip #5 Mix Your Own Hues • Find the color on another web site and use the Adobe color picker to sample it. • Scan an object and sample it. Examples: – Autumn leaf. – Fabric. – A sample chip from a paint store. – Decorating magazines. – Art books. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 29 Tip #5 Mix Your Own Hues • Or… mix it yourself, as an artist mixes paints. • Three techniques: – Use a semi-transparent overlay. – Set up a gradient. – Mix mathematically. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 30 Tip #5 Mix Your Own Hues • Semi-transparent overlay and color sample the overlapped area. #991AB3 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 31 Tip #5 Mix Your Own Hues • Set up a gradient between two colors and color sample a middle value. #BF24C3 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 32 Tip #5 Mix Your Own Hues • Mix mathematically by altering the codes: start with red, add more and more blue. #FF0000 #FF0033 #FF0066 #FF0099 #FF00CC #FF00FF © June 2008 Penny McIntire 33 Tip #5 Mix Your Own Hues • Why mess with the math version at all? • Because it gives you precise and minute control of the color, much more subtle and fine adjustment than any of the other methods. • Gives you access to all 16 million colors. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 34 Tip #6 Mix Your Own Tints • Tint: a color mixed with white • Can use a semi-transparent overlay or a gradient. #FF8080 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 35 Tip #6 Mix Your Own Tints • Mixing mathematically: alter the color code so that it approaches white #FFFFFF. #FF0000 #FF3333 #FF6666 #FF9999 #FFCCCC #FFFFFF © June 2008 Penny McIntire 36 Tip #7 Mix Your Own Shades • Shade: a color mixed with black. • Can use a semi-transparent overlay or a gradient. #660000 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 37 Tip #7 Mix Your Own Shades • Mixing mathematically: alter the color code so that it approaches black #000000 #FF0000 #CC0000 #990000 #660000 #330000 #000000 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 38 Tip #8 Mix Your Own Tones • Tone: a color whose intensity is “toned down” because it’s mixed with its complementary (opposite) color or some version of gray. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 39 Tip #8 Mix Your Own Tones • Tones are often considered to be more subtle and sophisticated. • Remember the “complementary colors” we just mentioned? They are different on the web than they are on the traditional color wheel – not going to go there today. • Instead, today we’ll mix using only gray, not complementary colors. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 40 Tip #8 Mix Your Own Tones • What is gray? • If black is #000000, and white is #FFFFFF, then it makes sense that grays are any three equal pairs: #CCCCCC #666666 #828282 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 41 Tip #8 Mix Your Own Tones • Can use a a semi-transparent gray overlay or a gradient to some version of gray. #AA3333 © June 2008 Penny McIntire The red hex pair was decreased, and the other two hex pairs were increased equally. Thus, getting closer to gray (equality). 42 Tip #8 Mix Your Own Tones • Mixing mathematically: alter the color code so that it approaches gray (three equal pairs). • That is, decrease the base color while increasing the other pair(s). © June 2008 Penny McIntire 43 Tip #8 Mix Your Own Tones • Decrease the base color while increasing the other pair(s)… #FF0000 #CC3333 #CC6666 #CC9999 #993333 #996666 #663333 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 44 Tip #8 Mix Your Own Tones • Alternately, start with the value (lightness or darkness) of gray that you want, and increase the base color… red #CC9999 #996666 #663333 gray #999999 #666666 #333333 blue #9999B2 #666682 #333352 © June 2008 Penny McIntire 45 What Does House Painting Have to Do with Web Design? © June 2008 Penny McIntire 46 Tip #9 Repeat Colors • Don’t fall into the trap that every element must be a different color. • Repetition provides serenity within a page, and continuity across pages. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 47 What Does Men’s Haberdashery Have to Do with Web Design? © June 2008 Penny McIntire 48 Tip #10 Reinforce the Hierarchy with Color • Consider a man’s suit: – Perhaps 60% of the color, usually the most subdued, is in the body of the suit. – Perhaps 30% of the color, often a bit brighter, is in the shirt. – Perhaps 10%, the brightest, is in the tie. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 49 Tip #10 Reinforce the Hierarchy with Color • Use the “10%” color to draw attention to the areas you want to emphasize. • Color is one of the most important tools in establishing the visual hierarchy we talked about earlier. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 50 What do Dingbats Have to Do with Web Design? • Dingbat fonts are shapes instead of typical characters… – Webdings, Shapes1, Shapes2, Arrows1, etc. • Use in graphics packages like Photoshop and Fireworks, not just in text editors. • For instance, the “man’s suit” on a prior slide. • Drawback — it can be tedious to know which keyboard character delivers which image. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 51 Bonus Tip #11 Download a Free Dingbat Chart • Remedy – a Word chart of common dingbat fonts and their keyboard equivalents for free download on my book’s website, VisualDesignModernWeb.com. • You can easily copy and paste a new row, select the row, and change to the font of your choice to get to keyboard equivalents for fonts not already on the chart. © June 2008 Penny McIntire 52 Contact Information Penny McIntire Department of Computer Science Northern Illinois University DeKalb, IL 60115 Phone 815.753.6495 [email protected] [email protected] © June 2008 Penny McIntire 53 Contact Information Penny McIntire Published by New Riders VisualDesignModernWeb.com [email protected]