Web development , php , ajax , symfony, framework, zend
In: web resources
31 Jan 2010
The web is an dynamic, organic being. It evolves as people do, responding to trends in blogging and design by constantly raising the bar. With millions of bloggers out there, we see constant evolutions of the next design trend.
Here are some of my favorite recent trends in web design. Although the examples listed here may not be the orginator of the trend, they are the first to catch my eye.
The design trend associated with Web 2.0 is actually multiple trends rolled into one.
I’ve often said, a designer who can pull off a simplistic design is just as talented as the one that can create a super-complex one. That is because a simple design is more than just leaving elements out. It is about balancing design, carefully choosing colors and typography, and expertly integration navigation and content to create an effective and smooth design.
Orginally, web designs included a header, with a logo and a content section, with the content. Recently, designers are pushing the limits by incorporating colors, logos, branding, messaging and graphics throughout the entire site, not just the header.
Web designers are putting much more thought into typography. There are many resources popping up to pick a typography set. Once upon a time, designs included an h1, h2, and p style. Now some designs include dozens of different font stylings.
Along with designing simpler sites, designers are exploring ways to keep content on one page. In portfolios, showcases or simple informational sites, developers are looking for ways to put all content on page one so the readers sees it all without having to click through anywhere. The example below you will recognized as Twitter. As arguably one of the top 5 sites on the web, everything you need to know about Twitter is located on the front page.
You know AJAX (asynchronous JavaScript and XML), it is that cool interaction when you click something on a site and it changes, without reloading. This is a huge advancement in web design technology and allows users to get the content they desire without moving about the site. Most major publishing platforms have integrated AJAX into their codex. The leader is easily seen in all the WordPress AJAX plugins.
Advances in compression technology, increased internet access speeds have allowed designers to grow the size and quality of images they use in new designs. This makes for an appealing and graphically pleasing design.
Strategically using dropshadows, angles and overlaps, designers have added a 3rd dimension to web design that was previously limited to 2 dimensions. Using these techniques, designers are able to draw user attention to specific areas consistent with the goals of the site. Perhaps conversion forms, twitter buttons or featured content.
Designers are adding overarching themes like grunge, retro, whimsical, etc. These themes tie together all elements of a design and give the user a feeling of continuity, adding to the overall experience.
Designers have realized that themes should be designed for a specific purpose such as magazine, portfolio, green, blogging, etc. Designing for a purpose allows the designer and webmaster to focus on function and not generalize the design so it can be used across multiple different sites.
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This blog delivers stylish and dynamic news for designers and web-developers on all subjects of design, ranging from: CSS, Ajax, Javascript, web design, graphics, typography, advertising & much more. Our goal is to help you communicate effectively on the web with an engaging website or functional interface.
5 Responses to Most Interesting Design Trends Among Popular Blogs
Lisa A
January 31st, 2010 at 7:13 am
usually this depends on how many works do they make in the year. This can be difficult to say because some can sy that they earn more and others earn lower. The best thing to do would be getting a jog first so you can get experience and also get in touch with someone that studies at the same school that you do. maybe he/she needs help to do somenthing and in this way you could get some experience because in the beginning it might be very hard to find something that pays well.
bnaxler
February 9th, 2010 at 10:26 am
Use Microsoft Publisher, you can choose from hundreds of different design templates, and then when you're finnished you can upload the news letter to your e-mail right from Microsoft Publisher.
EvanSnyder
March 19th, 2010 at 11:16 pm
I like Xara, a vector-based drawing program. It takes layers, lots of layers to make vector art look like brush work with gradiated colors. With Xara, I can draw a thin wire line and then covert that line to a shape that looks like a brush stroke.
Spanky
March 27th, 2010 at 3:18 pm
When you have the text selected with the text too you will see a dropdown in the menu with an "aa" next to it with the options: None, Sharp, Crisp, Strong, Smooth. This will make the text look nice and clean when at 100%. Once you've rasterized the text, it won't maintain it's smoothness when you enlarge it.
If you're trying to get it to look clean when you print it, that's not going to work because Photoshop is not meant for that. You'll want to use Illustrator.
Abob
March 29th, 2010 at 7:12 am
Well you have the right number for Twitter texts.
If it is still not working, read this…
and try this…
Still not working? Contact Twitter with this form… http://help.twitter.com/requests/new