Sunday, April 14, 2013

The Principle of Beautiful Web Design

By Lori Buenavista


When the Internet first became popular, there have been many unsightly internet sites: sites with glancing, clashing, fluorescent colors, sites with irritating flash animation pop-ups, sites with hokey background scenes featuring flowers or smiley faces. Thankfully, website development has improved immensely in the last ten years. If you stick to some basic guidelines, it's easy to design a wonderful website.

Color

Color is easily the most apparent feature of your site. Visitors quickly form an opinion of your web page and your company in accordance with the colors you've used. While you don't need a comprehensive art training, it's wise to know the basics about color concept.

Color wheels have been in existence since Sir Isaac Newton developed the first one in 1666. There are many versions, but all are structured in the same manner, with the same color families next to each other.

Artists don't just randomly pick their best colors and throw them together; some colors look best with others. The key of choosing the correct colors is called, "color harmony." There are many strategies to obtain color harmony.

Pick analogous colors. Pick any 3 colors which are alongside each other on a 12-part color wheel. For instance, green, yellow-green and yellow are analogous, so all three work efficiently together. You'll choose one to be the dominant color in the style and design.

Opt for subsidiary colors. Two colors that happen to be exactly opposite from each other on a color wheel are known as, "complementary." For instance, blue and orange (in diverse shades) complement one another nicely.

Pick out colors from mother nature. Nature has an superb color sense. Here you can see how red and various shades of green come together. Besides color harmony, make certain that your website features colors that are easy on the visitor's eyes. A hot pink background with white text will be difficult to read, and it looks unattractive.

Font. In choosing a font for your own internet site, pick something that is easy to see. Sans-serif fonts are often best. Cursive fonts can work for large text, but are extremely hard to read in smaller sized body text. Should you don't want your website to look like it was made in 1997, avoid cutesy fonts like comic sans.

Layout. Beautiful internet sites have a simple, easy to follow layout with a lot of white space. You don't need to crowd every page on your site with textual content and images-the information will 'pop' when it has room to breathe.

Arrange your online site so that text and images balance one another; don't have all of your elements of design on the left side of the page, as an example. Look at each web site of your site as if it were a stand-alone poster. Will it be visually desirable?

Navigation. Lovely web design contains effective navigation. Links to other pages should be easy to find. Use standard layout-either across the top, running down the left-hand side of the page, or both-for navigation. Visitors shouldn't need to search an entire page to find what they're looking for.




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