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Archive for the 'graphic design' Category

Designers’ Cookbook: How to make a penguin ‘turkey‘ dinner in under 30 minutes

Monday, November 12th, 2007

You may have noticed over the last seven or eight months, that the graphic at the top of this site changes every so often. I started this project back in May and have been trying to change the header graphic each month, slowly adding to it, making it bulkier, more “over the top”, in a manner of speaking. If you haven’t noticed, I have a glib sense of humor. Call this my little experiment into “evolutionary branding.”

Seeing as this is a month to give thanks, and in keeping with the spirit of making Indian vests out of brown paper bags, I thought I would share with you, my recipe for making this months Penguin ‘turkey‘ Dinner.

Step 1: Basic Shapes

how to make a penguin turkey in Photoshop

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The Conversation Goes Like This . . .

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

I’m not one to put myself through extensive pains finding the right title for business cards. I am a designer. I design for the web. Simple enough, right? The truth, however, is that it really isn’t. It’s a curious thing when, after all this time, the title web designer isn’t specific enough. On more than a handbag full of hands, worth of occasions, have I had the following conversation:

person: So, what do you do?

me: I’m a web designer.

person: So, what do you do?

According to A List Apart’s Web Design Survey Results, only 19.9% of people surveyed in the industry identified themselves as “web designers” by title. This could of course be in part due to the fact that the others are not web designers, but rather web developers or UI designers. So where is this line drawn? I am a web designer, a developer, a programmer, a user interface specialist, an information architect etc. etc. Do we just have too many ways of identifying ourselves?

The Web Presence Therapist

At times, I think the most appropriate title for myself would be “Web Presence Therapist”, because that’s just what it feels like. Have a seat. Take a load off. Tell me all about your web based troubles. Let it all out . . . but don’t you think that has more to do with how YOU want people to experience it, as apposed to how they want to experience it?

In the end, your web person ( insert title here ) is likely performing tasks clearly outside the scope his or her title eludes to. I’m convinced that the phrase “wearing multiple hats” didn’t carry the same meaning prior to the web designer / developer. We are expected to be the one stop solution to all “your” problems. Aside from the unbalanced fact that a majority of early web designers and developers were geeks to the core, it’s no wonder early titles of the code writing guild, like “web master”, emerged in the fledgling state of this industry. It’s a ridiculous term on every level, no doubt. But somehow, in retrospect, I think it may have been the most fitting. Here’s to you, Web Masters of the world!

Women Who Design the Web Survey: 2007 Results - Part I

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

There is one thing you’re sure to learn when you conduct a survey: just how many things you did wrong. My first attempt at conducting a survey of women web designers, made clear (sometimes embarrassingly so), just how many things I hadn’t thought through very well. It’s been a learning experience.

Back in late April of this year, A List Apart began the first truly comprehensive survey of people who make websites. This, following criticism in the media about the lack of gender diversity at web conferences.

I took an immediate interest in both the initial criticism over gender disparity and the response by A List Apart to conduct the Web Design Survey. One of the primary reasons I took such an interest in this, was because my personal experience was to the contrary.

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Repeat Penguin