Aug 22

Finding a right service of web design is a key to optimize our website. It can help us to get more visitors in our site and contribute to a good rank on the search engines. Whether the site is commercial or non-profit, it will be better to have a good strategy to improve the website. This can be achieved by having an excellent online marketing strategy and attractive web design service. Thus, finding a right place to consult about the development of the web and to help the optimization of the web is a nice first step in online business.

One of the best options to approach the top rank in the search engines is New York Web Design that offers professionalism from the expert and great dedication from the proved experience on the website design.

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Jun 9

Are you looking for a professional logo designer? Well, as you might have known, a logo has an important function for your product and company. From your logo, people can easily remember your products. It means that you have to design an easy to remember but meaningful logo. In your attempt of designing a great logo, you might need a help from a professional logo designer. You have to be able to find a logo designer that is able to express your idea in a form of a great logo.

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May 28
New York Web Design
icon1 mridbay | icon2 Web Design | icon4 05 28th, 2009| icon3No Comments »

Nowadays, there is significant growth on the number of websites on the internet. People have find out that website can help perceiving their unique identity or promoting their products or services. To be able to attract more visitors to their website, website owners need to make their website noticeable. One way to achieve that is having great web design. To do so, you might need to hire professional web designers; a web designer that is able to translate your needs into a real great website.

If you are looking for a professional web designer, you can go to Mustangwebdesigns.com. That website informs you that you can get quality service from New York Web Design.

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Apr 12

The e commerce world now growing so fast. People are compete to make website as the media to introduce their product to customers. With the technology, you can find so many online store and companies. If you are interested on joining e commerce world, the first thing you should do is making a good website that is friendly user for our customers. To make a good website, you can find the compatible web hosting provider.

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Apr 10

You may wake up one day and wondering why you have not been able to make your own website. You have the skills, the determination, and the brain to do that. So what makes you not get up and start building one?

One of the reasons you are not getting any website done because you simply do not have the time. You want to get a website done in a blink of an eye? So log on to buildyoursite.com and get your website ready top run.

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Nov 3

Eiseman once said that “Of all the forms of non-verbal communication, color is the most instantaneous method of conveying messages and meanings.” He sure is right.

It has been often said that the website’s color must coordinate well. But when you surf the net you can see too many websites that have horrible color schemes. Good color is essential to the success of a website as color adds interest and flavor. It can be used to highlight important messages and it can draw a visitor’s attention to important elements.

Colors have different effects on people. Certain colors can invoke certain emotions to people and these emotional reactions can affect the image of your company. Anything that can evoke responses in people needs to be looked at carefully when designing your website. There are a few things to consider in choosing the right colors for your site to avoid any mishap.

• Use colors wisely. Black and white is best used on text and background colors. Black and yellow can also prove to be very good contrast. However, a site done entirely in yellow or black won’t really be appealing.

• When choosing colors for your background and text, make sure that the colors you choose are contrasting ones. You can use a dark color for text against light color for background. Never use similar colors for your text and background. You should be very careful in contrasting colors as some tend to “vibrate” such as red text on blue background. This can hurt some people’s eye. 

• Simple color choices are often better. When having doubts about your colors you can always use black and white as they are easy to read and does not hurt your website.

• Avoid using patterned backgrounds because they appear to be noisy and tends to distract your website. Although they may seem pretty and fun, they often prove very hard to read.

Overall, you have to make sure that the colors that you use are pleasing and attractive to the eye. Select colors that best reflect the image that you want to give your visitors. Do not use normal color intensity images as a background behind text. And ensure that you use uniform color on all your pages to create a brand for your site.

Oct 27

A nostalgic look back at 90s web design, and a warning to anyone whose website is an accidental anachronism.

Remember the days when every PC was beige, every website had a little Netscape icon on the homepage, Geocities and Tripod hosted just about every single personal homepage, and "Google" was just a funny-sounding word?

The mid-late 1990s were the playful childhood of the worldwide web, a time of great expectations for the future and pretty low standards for the present. Those were the days when doing a web search meant poring through several pages of listings rather than glancing at the first three results–but at least relatively few of those websites were unabashedly profit-driven.

Hallmarks of 1990s Web Design

Of course, when someone says that a website looks like it came from 1996, it’s no compliment. You start to imagine loud background images, and little "email me" mailboxes with letters going in and out in an endless loop. Amateurish, silly, unprofessional, conceited, and unusable are all adjectives that pretty well describe how most websites were made just ten years ago.

Why were websites so bad back then?

Knowledge. Few people knew how to build a good website back then, before authorities like Jakob Nielsen starting evangelizing their studies of web user behavior.

Difficulty. In those days, there weren’t abundant software and templates that could produce a visually pleasing, easy-to-use website in 10 minutes. Instead, you either hand-coded your site in Notepad or used FrontPage.

Giddiness. When a new toy came out, whether it was JavaScript, Java, Frames, animated Gifs, or Flash, it was simply crammed into an already overstuffed toy box of a website, regardless of whether it served any purpose.

Browsing through the Internet Archive’s WayBack Machine, it’s hard not to feel a twinge of nostalgia for a simpler time when we were all beginners at this. Still, one of the best reasons for looking at 90s website design is to avoid repeating history’s web design mistakes. This would be a useful exercise for the tragic number of today’s personal homepages and even small business websites that are accidentally retro.

Splash Pages

Sometime around 1998, websites all over the internet discovered Flash, the software that allowed for easy animation of images on a website. Suddenly you could no longer visit half the pages on the web without sitting through at least thirty seconds of a logo revolving, glinting, sliding, or bouncing across the screen.

Flash "splash pages," as these opening animations were called, became the internet’s version of vacation pictures. Everyone loved to display Flash on their site, and everyone hated to have to sit through someone else’s Flash presentation.

Of all the thousands of splash pages made in the 1990s and the few still made today, hardly any ever communicated any useful information or provided any entertainment. They were monuments to the egos of the websites’ owners. Still, today, when so many business website owners are working so hard to wring every last bit of effectiveness out of their sites, it’s almost charming to think of a business owner actually putting ego well ahead of the profit to have been derived from all the visitors who hit the "back" button rather than sit through an animated logo.

Text Troubles

"Welcome to…" Every single website homepage in 1996 had to have the word "welcome" somewhere, often in the largest headline. After all, isn’t saying "welcome" more vital than saying what the web page is all about in the first place?

Background images. Remember all those people who had their kids’ pictures tiled in the background of every page? Remember how much fun it was trying to guess what the words were in the sections where the font color and the color of the image were the same?

Dark background, light text. My favorite was orange font on purple background, though the ubiquitous yellow white text on blue, green or red was nice, too. Of course, anyone who will make their text harder to read with a silly gimmick is just paying you the courtesy of letting you know they couldn’t possibly have written anything worth reading.

Entire paragraphs of text centered. After all, haven’t millennia of flush-left margins just made our eyes lazy?

"This Site Is Best Viewed in Netscape 4.666, 1,000×3300 resolution." It was always so cute when site owners actually imagined anyone but their mothers would care enough to change their browser set up to look at some random person’s website.

All-image no-text publishing. Some of the worst websites would actually do the world the service of putting all their text in image format so that no search engine would ever find them. What sacrifice!

Hyperactive Pages

TV-envy was a common psychological malady in 1990s web design. Since streaming video and even Flash were still in their infancy, web designers settled for simply making the elements on their pages move like Mexican jumping beans.

Animated Gifs

In 1996, just before the dawn of Flash, animated gifs were in full swing, dancing, sliding, and scrolling their way across the retinas of web surfers trying to read the text on the page.

Scrolling Text

Just in case you were having a too easy time tuning out all the dancing graphics on the page, an ambitious mid-1990s web designer had a simple but powerful trick for giving you a headache: scrolling text. Through the magic of JavaScript, website owners could achieve the perfect combination of too fast to read comfortably and too slow to read quickly.

For a while, a business owner could even separate the serious from the wannabe prospects based just on how (un)professional their business websites looked. Sadly, the development of template-based website authoring software means that even someone with no taste or sense whatsoever can make websites that look as good as the most biggest-budget design of five years ago.

Of course, there are still some websites whose owners seem to be trying to spark a resurgence in animated gifs, background images, and ugly text. ‘ll just have to trust that everyone is laughing with them, not at them.

Aug 30

One of the toughest challenges facing any designer is the web page. There are perhaps millions of pages in the World Wide Web all jostling for attention. The question that is foremost is how you as a designer can make a difference.

Study the subject being featured. Visit as many sites as possible that cover the same as well as related topics. Make a list of what works and what doesn’t. Avoid using a design that is going to be uniform with others. Unless your pages are distinctive they are not going to work.

1.    Try and avoid run of the mill things like page counters, java text scrolling, flashing images, GIF images, signs which say “we are not ready.” Or, too many illustrations or animations, black grounds or fade ins.
2.    Create a design which coveys in a stylish way what it has to. Instead of using downloaded illustrations use original ones.

3.    Avoid things like heavy files or graphics. These will slow down your pages. GIF is better than JPEG files. 

4.    Think of the target audience and subject being addressed when designing. The overall effect should be that of exclusivity.

5.    Avoid incorporating download plugins. While Flash is innovative and fun you will loose viewers if you don’t provide an HTML alternative.

6.    Design the pages so that they are not more than 50K.

7.    Remember the rule of thumb; a web page should not have more than three screens. And, ensure that the viewer does not have to scroll horizontally.

8.      Test your website pages with several browsers. Make sure they open quickly and completely. Do a reality check by asking a cross section of users to check the site. Usability checking will bring to the fore any mistakes made.

9.    Don’t use backgrounds with tiles or patterns it makes the design fussy and decreases readability. Avoid frames they make the pages difficult to book mark.

10.    Determine accurately the rules of creative design and ensure that you apply them. If you have links make sure they work. Limit page content. Pay attention to search engine optimization. Ensure that the design follows the content and is not a separate element. Maintain archives. Use innovative fonts and titles. The content should follow basic elements of style or a style sheet.

When designing the web page think about the site as a whole not each page separately.  There should continuity in design. Include a site map for easy navigation. Pay attention to imparting knowledge, include information on the subject of the site, give tips, make available how to articles as well as publications on the topic. The site and pages should be interactive without being a nuisance, so links must be well thought of and of practical use.

Keep in mind at all times the 5 golden principles of design: balance, rhythm, proportion, dominance, and unity.

Jul 2

Colors can make images delightful so as to attract at the same time convey its essence. Whether or not the budget is meager, web designers must create websites that fit the customers.

Why is choice of colors essential? According to the Institute for Color Research, human beings make a subconscious judgment about an item within 90 seconds of initial viewing and that between 62% and 90% of that assessment is based on color alone.

Indeed, colors play a domineering catapult in almost every thing. They have dominant effect that succumbs to influencing potential customers.

If you already have a web site, try to ask yourself the conscious judgment that viewers can formulate out of it. Colors say many things. It can persuade or dishearten or motivate or repel. Moreover, choice of colors can make or break your business in general.

Color really matters. It is powerful in a way that it can dictate whether the site will be a hit or a flop. In addition, web colors can trounce other web design blemish.

Of course, we cannot overlook the fact that web design comes in two important considerations - the functionality and the aesthetic considerations. The former though is more essential than the latter.

Nonetheless, it must be understood that equilibrium is essential. The two must be harmonized so as to create a positive perception for the business.

Fiery red, sky blue, sunny yellow, mint green and other colors have distinct personalities. Fiery red conveys speed, danger, excitement and passion. Sky blue means freshness and tranquility. Sunny yellow conveys brightness and verve. Mint green, on the other hand, means coolness and nature. Each color gives different impressions and vibes thus, be careful in using them.

Just a single color can bring back memories good for reminiscing the past. It can dig the chambers in the heart to elicit reaction. In fact, it can woo the heart of your viewers.
Choose the right colors for your web design because it can be the determining factor of the success of your web design.