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Basic
Web Design Principles,
Home
Page
Home page should clearly indicate what the site is about.
Provide top level navigation on the first page, your
logo, and tell to the visitor what he can found on your
web site. Your home page should be informative, and
should call your visitor on action. Home page is the
place where the visitor decides what he will do, click
on some of your links, or leave the site. If you have
a discount, or if you offer some free service in attempt
to make a contact with potential customers, make sure
to provide link to that service on your home page.
If you decide to implement flash intro on your first
page, make sure to give the user possibility to skip
the flash intro. The link “skip intro” should be outside
of the flash, because you will force the visitor to
wait until the Flash movie is loaded.
Navigation structure
Place the navigation on the place where the people are
used too look for it. Don’t experiment with the navigation!
I can’t stress enough this. Keep the navigation system
same on ALL pages. Visitors are not ready to learn your
site navigation system. Consistency is the most important
thing here. You should focus your effort on building
consistent rhythm across all pages of your site.
Font size
Your font size should be enough big so your text can
be read without effort. There are many people who will
not bother to read very small letters. Don’t loose your
visitors because of font size. Optimal size seems to
be 12-13 points. Visitors should be able to read your
text easy, without any effort. Broke big chunks of texts
in paragraphs and make them easy to follow.
Line Length
The length of a line of type should be comfortable to
read. The optimal line length for printed materials
seems to be about 10 to 12 words, or 60 to 70 characters.
Somewhat shorter lines of about 40 to 50 characters
may be more appropriate for larger displays. If the
line is too long the reader must search for the beginning
of it; if it is too short it will break up words or
phrases awkwardly.
Creating emphasis
Creating emphasis is an important and integral part
of designing and typesetting. Handled with taste and
good judgment it can help direct and inform the reader.
When these qualities are lacking, or someone feels that
every word is important and must be emphasized in some
way then your web page starts to look like a battlefield
and becomes difficult to read!
Graphics
It’s well known that one picture worth more than million
words. This rule applies on Internet too. Do your best
to show clear, attractive photo of your product. If
you offer a service, find a photo which will best describe
him. However, be careful about file size. Don’t compress
your photo to that level to not be clear, but also don’t
leave the photo on full quality. That will make file
size too big, and will increase download time.
Gif vs. JPEG
Less experienced web designers many times use wrong
format to store their picture. Here are few guidelines
which will help mistakes to be avoided. If your photo
has small number of colors (less then 64) GIF will be
better choice. Make sure however to reduce the palette
size too. That is, if your image have10-15 colors only,
reduce your palette on 16 or 32 colors.
Also, if your image contains text, GIF format should
be your choice. JPEG use loosy compression method and
will cause text and edges to become blurry.
If you are saving a photograph – save it as JPEG
JPEG images can contain over 32 million different colours.
That is much more than the human eye can see.
If you want to incorporate large text into a photographic
image, JPEG may be a good format to use. While the edges
may still get blurred, danger of it becoming unreadable
is slim. If you think your image is more important than
the text, go ahead and use the JPEG format.
Speed
Do your best to reduce the download time. We live in
a busy world and people are not will to wait long time.
Try to reduce size of your graphics as much as possible
without to destroy the image. Image must look good,
but size (in KB) should be as small as possible.
Test before publishing
Do your homework, and do it well. Your visitors will
not bother to send you an E-Mail that some of your links
does not work or that some of your images does not appear.
Even if someone do so, it is quite embarrassing. Perform
spell and grammar checking. Remember that in many cases
visitor will build his opinion about you or your company
on base on your web site. When published, site should
not contain any “under construction” or “coming soon”
messages.
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