The Science of Web Art, Design and Development

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Colors Galore for the web with Yafla

In december I’ve wrote an article talking a little bit about color theory and featuring Kuler, a very nice and useful tool from Adobe to explore the color theory.

Now, reading the Usabilità blog I came across with a nice tool that is much simpler, but has the power to bring insight when choosing colors for web pages. Also has the advantage that no much color theory is needed to use it. Very useful tool.

If this appeals to you, check Yafla.

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Multilayered web layouts

CloudsA few weeks ago I came up with the idea of having a web page with images composed of multiple layers and the layers could move differently when the object is resized.

And here it is.

Of course we all see web 2.0 pages with a lot of resizable and draggable menus, images and all imaginable things, but I decided to do it very clean and very easy to understand, after all is just a proof of concept. read full post…

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One year of Zo’C

On february 22, 2006 the Zo’C blog started as a gourmet blog about food and lifestyle, but the need for a broader subject made design , photography, web development, book reviews and a couple of more things to show up.

Initially it was a project together with my wife, but I ended up giving her the annazuhlke.com domain and she started her own blog that now resides at www.annazuhlke.com/whiterabbit. By the way, that is where the Zo’C name comes from, it stands fror Zühlke-O’Connor, the common part of our surnames.

As a birthday present to myself and the Zo’C blog. I have upgraded it from the basic blogger blog to a fully hosted WordPress blog in dreamhost.

It took me over a day to take the old and nice Zo’C layout and implementing it to suit the base of the wonderful Sirius theme. Also I had to tweak a lot of the internal PHP to make it look just like the old one.

Well, not quite…

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Elements of typographic style and web typography

I have just finished reading Robert Bringhurst’s book Elements of Typographic Style, a classic book and essential guide on typography.

Being typography an art over half a millenium old and being the natural heir of the millenar legacy of scribes, there is plenty to learn from history when typesseting a text.

Any good designer knows that desing is much more than just good taste and typography is no exception.

Much of what pleases us is related to natural (biological) factors and is generally universal and somehow unvariable over history. Another good part is cultural, which ends up in history again to understand its dynamics.

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Colors galore with Kuler

Except for some people that were born with some strong color sense in their veins, most of us know that matching colors is not naturally easy.

Black and white are easy to match, adding and third color to this mixture is simple as well, but putting another color on the game may be very painful for untrained eyes.

Whether you are a web, graphic, fashion or any other kind of visual designer or not. It is probable that you will have to deal with color at some point, because it is likely that you will interact with a designer’s work.

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Teaching Webstandards to newcomers

Quite often I find introductions to HTML texts longer than they should. They explain how problems from the past can be solved with a new approach, things that existed in the past and you shouldn’t be using anymore.

And to do that, often texts name those practices. And because some people may not know that particular technique, they may even explain it, just to tell you that you should never use it, and that you were happy if you weren’t acquainted with it on the first place.

The web is there for a reasonably long time now, and some readers of a text like this one, may never lived the time when were formed the practices that are condemned today.

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