WebBlather

Free Advice and Commentary on Web Site Issues

Archive for the 'Design' Category

When Creative Gets in the Way

Sunday, August 28th, 2005

I’ve been visiting a lot of artistic sites lately, and the right half of my brain is impressed with the amazing visuals that some designers have created. The left brain, however: not so impressed.
Folks, this isn’t Myst. As much as I admire the creative impulse, if a user has to hunt around just to figure […]

Ode to White Space

Tuesday, June 7th, 2005

OhWhiteSpace!
How little you are used in Web design — how blithely we pack in the content, using ever-smaller fonts and multi-colored backgrounds, lists nested inside lists, trying to jam as manywordslinkslogoschoicesas possible into the first screenful, not realizing that clutter brings confusion — or knowing it, but having many messages to deliver and feeling unable […]

Using Color for Direction

Tuesday, May 24th, 2005

If you’ve read any other posts on this blog, you know that I generally consider content or services to be the most important part of any Web site.
Users want to know, “what can I do here?” — and everything you do, from design to layout to artwork or photos, should focus on that question.
That includes […]

Quality vs. Quantity

Monday, May 16th, 2005

There’s a lot of talk about SEO (Search Engine Optimization) lately. It’s like it’s the second coming of Jello Pudding Pops — everybody’s just gotta have one. And as with most Internet things, where the buzz is, businesses have sprung up to meet the “need.” All these businesses need clients, so they set about creating […]

Your Site Reviewed — Cheap and Fast!

Friday, April 15th, 2005

Now you can get expert feedback on your Web site or a portion of a site (such as proposed redesigns). I launched my Rapid Review service because, frankly, I wished someone else was doing it for the sites I’ve designed. Here’s the deal:

It’s fast. You’ll get a report back in under three business days.
It’s cheap. […]

Less is More

Friday, April 1st, 2005

Here’s a guideline for people designing a Web site (or anything else for that matter): if you’re looking at the draft design and thinking something’s not right, don’t add anything. Instead, take something away.
Too often a decent start is marred by clutter. We should resist the urge to “fix” a design by adding more stuff […]

New Look, Same Old Feel

Tuesday, March 29th, 2005

This blog is relaunched today along with the shiny new Web site for Brian Wold Consulting. Yep, I’m out on my own now, providing full-service Web consulting. Browse the nav links at the top of these pages for details on the services. Whew!
Merging the look and feel of this blog is a decent example of […]

Consistency and Expectations

Wednesday, February 9th, 2005

Consistency in font, color and size matters.
As visitors move through your Web site, they gather clues (unconsciously, perhaps) to the structure of each page. It helps them move to the meat faster. This is part of what makes a user feel comfortable on your site — it’s a good thing and you should protect […]

Finding Links In Text

Sunday, February 6th, 2005

Pay attention to where and how you place hyperlinks in text on the screen. Here are guidelines, with dead-link examples :
First, be sure your style makes the link look like a link.

Use a distinct color. Nielsen and others advocate for keeping it the browser-default blue; I don’t see anyone getting confused by a link style […]

Linear Flow

Friday, February 4th, 2005

In general, users prefer the “action” items on a Web page to follow some sort of understandable flow — I’ll propose a linear flow moving down and right. By action items, I mean buttons or links where I can do stuff — submit a form, click to a subtopic, etc. And as noted elsewhere, users […]

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