Wednesday, November 4, 2015

50 Web Designs with Awesome Typography

These beautiful websites exhibit how typography can drive designs. In this showcase, you’ll find fascinating and unapologetically bold implementations of typographic elements.

MamboMambo

Towards a Universal Mundane

Barkas.

Vince Frost

DayTrip

This Also

Photomap - Chris Wang

Kraftwerk

KONTOR LONDON

Taostudio

Pauline Osmont

Jean-Christophe Suzanne

INDEX-STD

Kyle Read

Lines Conference

Bold

Arc

Design Disruptors

Sanskriet

Getaway

Piet Oudolf

Fluff Festival

BrightMedia

Rufina e hijas

Jova

Moonshine Grill

Palaxy Tracks

In Pieces

Metaverse Mod Squad

Parcel

Brass

Masonry

Halfliner

Jun Duffy

UpDroid

Rally Interactive

Kittie's Cakes

wild-beasts.co.uk

The Estate Trentham

Day of the Dead

Large Creative

CIRQ

Found them First

Trellis Farm & Garden

Julie Clute and Kurt Elster

HWAIW

Another Pony

TALK PR

Crudo

Read Next

Jacob Gube is the founder of Six Revisions. He’s a front-end developer. Connect with him on Twitter and Facebook.

The post 50 Web Designs with Awesome Typography appeared first on Six Revisions.


by Jacob Gube via Six Revisions

10 Online Tools to Create Content Like a Boss (with infographic)

10 Must-Have Tools for Content Marketers

Never has great web content ever been so important. Back in the day, website administrators simply put in keyword-dense material on their sites without regard to the actual value or quality of the content. They paid for that atrocity when the Penguin (not the Batman villain, but rather the Google algorithm) gave them the what-for!

Today, if you want your site to rank and get the exposure you need for your business, you have to make sure that your content is not only search engine friendly, but also relevant, organic, and gives value to your audience.

Here are 10 online tools to help you create content like a boss.

by Guest Author via Digital Information World

Daily Design Confusion

Originally published on uxmas.com

As a User Experience Designer, the people in my life have come to the well-founded conclusion that if I spot something that nags at me because of usability issues, I will point them out. Sometimes repeatedly.

We all encounter designs on a daily basis that could have been better thought through, and I’d like to share with you my daily journey through these encounters.

First stop, transport.

I usually take the bus to get to and from places, but we also have a car. We have had this car for almost 6 months and I still can’t remember how to open the door on the first try!

Some of you may laugh at this and I would have to agree that it seems like a ridiculous statement. We laugh at ourselves every time we get it wrong. It is as though the car has a personality of its own and is silently counting…

Car: 140, Car’s owners: 0

But our car isn’t normal, I swear!!

To unlock the car doors, you need to turn the key anti-clockwise and to lock it you turn the key clockwise. This goes against our mental models of how things are supposed to work. It is such an ingrained concept that re-training simply isn’t happening.

So once I finally manage to open the door, I then head off to work…

The Coffee Machine

Now like many professionals, I’ve become somewhat of a coffee junkie. The main coffee machine in my workplace kitchen is very techno. Seriously. It changes colours, cycling through all the colours of the rainbow.

If you push the buttons to get your drink, then walk away to do something else in the meantime, this wonderful coffee machine will give you a special treat. It beeps once, then goes through a rinse cycle, spitting watery milk into the unsuspecting cup below. Yum! Not.

We’re teaching people to be on to it, of course and pay attention, but if you don’t get to your cup in time, your coffee basically turns into machine spit.

My Filing Cabinet

After I’ve safely rescued my coffee cup I meet my next battle.

My filing cabinet.

My lovely filing cabinet will only allow you to open one draw at a time. If another door is open even a smidgen, you can’t open any other draw. You also have to pull, quite forcefully at times, to open it.

But my design woes don’t end at the working day, oh no. When I return home, there are many more to contend with.

The Friendly Kitchen Sink Tap

Now I will be the first to admit, that this one isn’t the tap’s fault. This an installation problem, but I thought I would include it just the same.

Generally taps have some kind of colour indicator showing you which direction is hot and which is cold. My friendly kitchen tap has that, but the person who installed it didn’t check before they put it in, and put it the wrong way. So red is cold and blue is hot.

This one is a little easier to re-train my mental model because it comes with additional cues, for example, the cold water comes out of the tap faster. But when I first moved in, especially on morning when I’m half asleep, I have managed to get this wrong and get scalded.

Shop Doors

Last but not least, I think this one is very common and many people may have run in to this one (sometimes quite literally – sorry). Here we have the door to our video store.

I suppose you could forgive this door because it has a very worn out PUSH sign that you can barely make out, but I never read it fast enough to stop my blunder.

My mental model associates handles like this with something you pull, not push, even though this is a common design with doors. Generally you can get away with the pattern because there tend to be other discernible features that allow a person to pick up the direction the door will swing. But this is not always the case and can still be quite frustrating.

But is there a Silver Lining in Bad Design?

Now that I’ve taken you through a small part of my daily design confusions, some that may match your own, and others that may be new, I would like to add one last thing.

Although these things have shown bad design decisions, I think that we need some bad design in our world. It helps drive those of us inclined to design, to create better experiences, to think, explore, and ruminate on how things could be done differently.

It helps point out how important good design is, and how noticeable bad design decisions are.

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The post Daily Design Confusion appeared first on UX Mastery.


by Natalie Eustace via UX Mastery

Likely – Social Sharing Buttons

Likely is the social sharing buttons that aren't shabby. It supports Twitter, Facebook, Google Plus, Pinterest, VKontakte (ВКонтакте), Odnoklassniki (Одноклассники) etc.


by via jQuery-Plugins.net RSS Feed

A Beginner Splurge in Node.js

It's 3 a.m., hands over the keyboard while staring at an empty console. The bright prompt over a dark backdrop ready, yearning to take in commands. Want to hack up Node.js for a little while? One of the exciting news about Node.js is that it runs anywhere. This opens up the stack to various ways to experiment with it. For any seasoned veteran, this is a fun run of the command line tooling. What I like the most is that we can survey the stack from within the safety net of the command line. The cool thing is that we are still talking about JavaScript, hence most of you should not have any problem. So, why not fire up node up in the console?

In this article, I'll introduce you to Node.js. My goal is to go over the main highlights while hiking up some pretty high ground. This is an intermediate overview of the stack while keeping it all inside the console. If you want a beginner-friendly guide about Node.js, I suggest you to watch the SitePoint premium's course Node.js: An Introduction.

Continue reading %A Beginner Splurge in Node.js%


by Camilo Reyes via SitePoint