
Web designer Tim Van Damme, founder of Made by Elephant and blogger at Max Voltar, has skyrocketed from relative oblivion to comparative fame in little over a year. Before you succumb to jealousy, consider the man’s work. Consider, for example, his spanking new redesign of Gowalla, Austin-headquartered AlamoFire’s nifty, location-based social networking game for iPhone, Android, and even newer Blackberry devices (kind of).
Launched as a public beta in March 2009, Gowalla “uses a large catalog of virtual goods to encourage its users to go places and meet people.”
Seven years ago I was a cigarette smoker. Today I’m a compulsive Gowalla user. I check in at the corner deli, at the library, and at the movies. I check in when I get to my studio in the morning and first thing when I get home at night. (Well, maybe eighth thing when I get home—I have an active five-year-old and a sick dog to take care of first.)
I love Gowalla and now I love its website just as much as I love the application, thanks to the stylish skinning of young Master Van Damme.

Note that I haven’t mentioned content strategy, labels, user flow, error handling, and all the other things that go into most good redesigns. I haven’t mentioned those things because this redesign is mainly a skin job. Alamofire designed a great brand and crafted a fine piece of user experience (not to mention a host of kick-ass icons) well before involving Tim Van Damme. So the challenge here was to take a strongly branded, well-thought-out, existing site with a fanatical user base and an already super-strong visual identity, and to make it that much better.
He met the challenge, and then some. I wish I possessed before and after screen shots to show how and why the redesign trumps its predecessor without scrapping what users like me loved about the old look and feel. Aside from the one big change (a light green background that feels like a translucent overlay over the previous background), it’s all about the details here, and the details are primarily tiny enhancements to the user experience—from subtle glows that make the interface feel more responsive (more alive), to WordPress- and Mail-style numeric indicators that cue users when there’s new content behind a tab.
This is good design, the test of which, for me, is always that I wish I’d done it.










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7 Responses to Van Damme, that’s good design
kinndee@verizon.net
March 4th, 2010 at 8:47 pm
Read the instructions on the package. Normally they need to be on for a while, but I'm not sure how long since I don't know what medications you are using. If you still have questions, call your doctor or check with a pharmacist.
lolwut?
March 8th, 2010 at 6:41 pm
Someone has dinosaurs on the brain.
And BTW dinosaurs NEVER lived with man. The people who claim that they did and deceive people are charlatans.
LUG
March 14th, 2010 at 5:46 pm
Many thanks to 'MakingComputers.Net' the links are official.
LUG.
cookie monster
March 23rd, 2010 at 7:59 am
try breathe right strips. never know might help.
archaeologia
March 25th, 2010 at 5:11 pm
I don't think it's naff enough to prepare you for the actual shopping experience when you go to Morrisons. I went there once, naff loud music, garish displays of special offers that weren't really special at all on the end of every aisle, I only went there to see if they had a good deal on the wholemeal bread, they didn't, got two in those stay fresh wrappers concealing how curiously mis-shapen they were……..
No offence to anyone who works there or enjoys/accepts shopping there, but I decided it was an experience I didn't need to repeat.
Agree though that the logo is pretty feeble, and btw I'm in the South.
Rahul W
April 29th, 2010 at 4:29 am
Try tweetdeck
after setting up your twitter account go to the application settings and add your facebook account. I hope this helps.
Mango
May 16th, 2010 at 3:43 am
The iPhone is the biggest waste of money, the BlackJack is so much better.
Honestly.