20 strong navigation and header examples in web design
Posted by Evan | Posted in Web Design | Posted on 07-06-2010-05-2008
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20 examples of header and navigation design.
20 examples of header and navigation design.
20 web sites that have been influenced by illustration.
A small collection of well design web site homepages to inspire.
It’s the Tuesday after a long weekend and I’m sat in the Roebuck pub near work having just eaten a Cajun chicken baguette. Tastey it was too. I have my book, 1918, but I’ve been more tempted by my new poker app that I downloaded over the weekend. I managed to get tickets today thanks to O2 Priority for the Australia v England at Twickenham in November. Some more freelance work is lined up for this afternoon.
But in the meantime, I’m just sitting back enjoying this relaxing moment in the day before heading back into the business end of the afternoon for some more web design and related work. A busy week is lined up but will be topped off with a nice dinner this Friday night with my girlfriend and her family where I’ll be meeting her sister for the first time.
My new web site design portfolio was launched on Tuesday 25th May to much fanfair and celebration. The site is in ‘beta’ as there are some new features and new content arriving shortly.
Have a look around and feel free to leave some feedback.
No more white space! No more tiny logos!
Check out this classic take on what designers go through.
That’s it. I’m going to hang up my mouse and keyboard. I’ve made it!
You know you’ve finally hit the big time when your web design work features on a Taiwanese news channel. Head over to 56.com to check out their report.
Just an update to say that my site is nearing completion and will be up soon. Featuring my web design portfolio, travel photos and stories and some other junk…
The V&A Museum is running a Digital Design Sensations exhibit until 11th April 2010.
It’s £5 to get in, well worth it I think.
As the web industry matures and moves forward with web standards, a certain amount of focus is now moving on to ‘Real’ fonts on the web. That is to say, using non HTML standard fonts on websites as live font. The challenge here now is to standardise this new frontier so that designers and developers can implement their chosen fonts in a cross browser compatible and compliant way. All this without having to revert to the dark days of non compliant browsers and browser specific hacks.
There’s an article by Jeffery Zeldman on real fonts for the web that’s very much worth a read.