mercoledì 4 agosto 2010
Typography
some good articles about typography : The Art & Sc
ience of Communicating through Type
http://www.mightyfinegraphics.com/cg/typography.html
- Text
- Background does not interrupt the text
- Text is big enough to read, but not too big
- The hierarchy of information is perfectly clear
- Columns of text are narrower than in a book to make reading easier on the screen
- Navigation
- Navigation buttons and bars are easy to understand and use
- Navigation is consistent throughout web site
- Navigation buttons and bars provide the visitor with a clue as to where they are, what page of the site they are currently on
- Frames, if used, are not obtrusive
- A large site has an index or site map
- Links
- Link colors coordinate with page colors
- Links are underlined so they are instantly clear to the visitor
- Graphics
- Buttons are not big and dorky
- Every graphic has an alt label
- Every graphic link has a matching text link
- Graphics and backgrounds use browser-safe colors
- Animated graphics turn off by themselves
- General Design
- Pages download quickly
- First page and home page fit into 800 x 600 pixel space
- All of the other pages have the immediate visual impact within 800 x 600 pixels
- Good use of graphic elements (photos, subheads, pull quotes) to break up large areas of text
- Every web page in the site looks like it belongs to the same site; there are repetitive elements that carry throughout the pages
- Backgrounds
- Default gray color
- Color combinations of text and background that make the text hard to read
- Busy, distracting backgrounds that make the text hard to read
- Text
- Text that is too small to read
- Text crowding against the left edge
- Text that stretches all the way across the page
- Centered type over flush left body copy
- Paragraphs of type in all caps
- Paragraphs of type in bold
- Paragraphs of type in italic
- Paragraphs of type in all caps, bold, and italic all at once
- Underlined text that is not a link
- Links
- Default blue links
- Blue link borders around graphics
- Links that are not clear about where they will take you
- Links in body copy that distract readers and lead them off to remote, useless pages
- Text links that are not underlined so you don't know they are links ..(If you're not going to underline your links, please make darned sure ..that each link is perfectly clearly a link! Don't make me wander around ..with my mouse checking to see if randomly colored text is a link!)
- Dead links (links that don't work anymore)
- Graphics
- Large graphic files that take forever to load
- Meaningless or useless graphics
- Thumbnail images that are nearly as large as the full-sized images they link to
- Graphics with no alt labels
- Missing graphics, especially missing graphics with no alt labels
- Graphics that don't fit on the screen (assuming a screen of 800 x 600 pixels)
- Tables
- Borders turned on in tables
- Tables used as design elements, especially with extra large (dorky) borders
- Blinking and animations
- Anything that blinks, especially text
- Multiple things that blink
- Rainbow rules (lines)
- Rainbow rules that blink or animate
- "Under construction" signs, especially of little men working
- Animated "under construction" signs
- Animated pictures for email
- Animations that never stop
- Multiple animations that never stop
- Junk
- Counters on pages -- who cares
- Junky advertising
- Having to scroll sideways (800 x 600 pixels)
- Too many little pictures of meaningless awards on the first page
- Frame scroll bars in the middle of a page
- Multiple frame scroll bars in the middle of a page
- Navigation
- Unclear navigation; over complex navigation
- Complicated frames, too many frames, unnecessary scroll bars in frames
- Orphan pages (no links back to where they came from, no identification)
- Useless page titles that don't explain what the page is about
- General Design
- Entry page or home page that does not fit within standard browser window (800 x 600 pixels)
- Frames that make you scroll sideways
- No focal point on the page
- Too many focal points on the page
- Navigation buttons as the only visual interest, especially when they're large (and dorky)
- Cluttered, not enough alignment of elements
- Lack of contrast (in color, text, to create hierarchy of information, etc.)
- Pages that look okay in one browser but not in another from
Basic Principles of graphic design: Proximity - Alignement - Repetition - Contrast
Proximity
Related items should be grouped together.
Likewise, items that are not related should not be close to each other. The process of grouping related information creates visual cues. Williams also suggests never having the same amount of white space between elements that aren't a part of a list.
Alignment
Everything on a page should be visually connected to something else on the page.
Nothing should be placed arbitrarily. When elements are aligned they are connected to each other, even if they are separated on the page.
Repetition
Repeat design elements throughout the entire piece.
Repeat design elements throughout the entire piece.
The element can be a font style, graphic, line, icons, colors, the list is endless.
Contrast
If two items aren't the same, make them very different.
Contrast adds visual interest to your page. You can create visual interest by using color, size and weight or any other property of an element.
fromBasic Principles of graphic design
Several links about "Basic principles of graphic design"
1) Very simple - just a quick read would be enough
http://www.math.duke.edu/education/ccp/resources/write/design/graphicindex.html
1) Very simple - just a quick read would be enough
http://www.math.duke.edu/education/ccp/resources/write/design/graphicindex.html
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