Posts Tagged time

The Unstoppable Carousel

Javascript carousels are a nice way to show off multiple products or highlights in the same area of the page. But there is one thing about the badly made ones that annoys me: they have no way to pause the thing. Here’s an example of a product carousel used on the Penguin

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A Showcase of Artistic Typography

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Should You Learn Photoshop or Fireworks? (and more!)

In this week’s question time I talk about whether it’s best to learn Photoshop or Fireworks, what software I use to create these Question Time videos and I offer advice for designers who are just out of school and are looking for design work.

This week’s questions

Hi Chris, I would love to hear your thoughts on the various design programs. I started out using Fireworks (Macromedia) for designing and just can’t get my head around Adobe Photoshop. However it seems that every designer in the world is using PS.

Hi Chris, I was just wondering what software you use to make/edit your ‘question time’ videos?

I’ve just got out of school, do you have any advice for someone wanting to go out there on their own? How did you get started?

Interesting design links

8 Things They Don’t Tell You About Being a Web Designer

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40+ Inspiring Grunge Ridden Photos of Ruins

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8 Tips to Secure a WordPress Site

22b26 appsumo 8 Tips to Secure a WordPress Site

Security is one of those topics that comes up time and time again. You hear the advice, you know you should do it

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How to Get Facebook, Twitter, and RSS Counts {WP}

fb377 counts How to Get Facebook, Twitter, and RSS Counts {WP}

You will have seen blogs showcase their Twitter, Facebook, and RSS counts with typography. With these numbers in plain text, you can style them into your website

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Useful Tools for Making Your Life Online Easier

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Carving Pixels

Developers—that is, those who spend most of their time on back-end code rather than front-end—often say that they’re no good at design. Sometimes they put things together that end up looking rough, and they take it as proof of their lack of design talent. Of course lacking experience is a major reason for this, but I don’t really buy it that developers can’t design. I think there is something else at play here.

When you write code, the end product either works or doesn’t. There is no sort-of-works stage. Yes, the software as a whole may have bugs which put it in the sort-of-works box, but its individual components either work or don’t work. Recently we’ve got the whole test-driven development movement which advocates writing tests

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Avoiding Unscoped Work from Unreasonable Clients

0102 01 unscoped work clients thumbnail Avoiding Unscoped Work from Unreasonable Clients Read the rest of this entry »

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Blog.SpoonGraphics Turns 4 – A Look Back in Time

It’s that time of year again, the time when Blog.SpoonGraphics gets another year older. Last year I created a special commemorative poster

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How To Get Yourself Noticed & Find Work (and more!)

In this week’s question time I talk about how you can get yourself noticed in the design industry in order to find work, which websites are the most beneficial to display your work on, what time I wake up in the morning and how you can get feedback on your personal projects.

This week’s questions

  • What advice do you have for getting noticed and find work?
  • Which do you see as more beneficial in the way of getting your art out there, sites such as Behance or others like DeviantART?
  • What time do u wake up?
  • I know you get client feedback, but what about the work that isn’t done for a client. Where can you go to get feedback?

Interesting links

Create a Vibrant Space-themed Poster in Photoshop

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Against Instant Notifications

651f1 new Against Instant NotificationsYou receive a new message, say an email or a tweet, and at that very moment your software decides to do something stupid. A little red bubble appears over its icon. A ringing bell is heard. Sometimes even the message itself will pop up over your screen announcing its arrival and inviting you to read it.

Is it not rude to disturb people? Does the software assume you were sitting there doing absolutely nothing, just waiting for that update? Not only does it decide to disturb you, it does it in the most forceful way it possibly can, using every weapon at its disposal: sounds, colors and animations.

Instead of serving the user, the software now decides it is in command, and begins pulling the shots. At its will, the user is forced to check for new messages—reminiscent of the bell being pulled to call the butler. Instead of checking for messages at a time convenient to the user, the software forces them to check it at the time of its choosing. What I’m arguing against isn’t so much the mechanism of notifications. I can disable Growl or turn off notifications for a particular app on the iPhone. Technically they work. It’s about how we interact with notifications.

Instant notifications are a feature that was useful at the rise of fast communication technologies. It notified you of new messages because it could, and because it was genuinely useful (e.g. an emergency pager). Using this feature for every service, especially those on the desktop that by design only work when you’re working, doesn’t make any sense. Notifications are inherently negative, barring the few cases where you actually need them. Whenever you receive a notification, your brain is pulled away from its current task. This is distracting and breaks focus. The more notifications you receive, the more distracted you will be.

Your brain is reacting to an outside stimulus, which the phone or the computer provides. This stimulus is governed by the time of arrival, but this rarely has much importance. Yes, you will sometimes wait for that important email or SMS to arrive, but many other times it won’t be time sensitive, which the application assumes by default. In this way, real-time apps actually have a negative value in that they consume your most precious resource—your time—on their own terms, rather than on yours.

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Social Networking Strategies for Finding More Work

0075 01 social media find work thumbnail Social Networking Strategies for Finding More Work Read the rest of this entry »

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Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

This week I thought I’d switch things up from my usual tutorial posts and publish something more along the lines of an opinionated article. This topic in particular is something I’ve had in mind for a while so I’ve eventually got round to jotting down my thoughts. Hopefully this little article will give some insight into my life behind my blogs and maybe even give some inspiration or advice.

The topic in question is an overview of things people both love and hate me for in the design community – Well, some of them aren’t directed at me personally and the terms love and hate might be slightly over exaggerated, but these are things that I do that all have polar opposites in terms of how people perceive me because of them.

I run a design blog

0eded 1 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

Well, two actually! Since 2007 design blogs have boomed to the point where the community is on the verge of over-saturation. Once upon a time designers acquired their knowledge and latest news from books, magazines and online journals of select high profile designers. Nowadays design blogs litter the design community with hundreds of new posts every day, some of high quality, some of low quality.

Why people hate me for this

Over the past few years the number of design blogs in the community has grown exponentially. Unfortunately the large majority of these blogs were set up with an aim to earn a bit of cash on the side so they were posting more and more link bait articles in order to gain the most traffic. As time went on the quality of the posts decreased which resulted in design blogs getting a bad reputation. Design blogs like mine are now seen as an infection to the design community that constantly spread low-quality content.

Why people love me for this

Many blogs, including my own are the primary source of knowledge, inspiration and creative drive for many designers. I’ve heard from plenty of people who cite my design blogs as their favourite places to visit on the web, as well as those who look forward to checking out every new posts in order to learn something new or receive a boost of creative inspiration.

Why I keep doing it

There’s the obvious advantage that I’ve seen some amazing opportunities from my design blogs, but the reason I started my blogs and the main reason I continue publishing articles is to help people out and share what I know with others. I find it hugely satisfying that my posts, whether they’re tutorials, roundups of resources or creative inspiration provide designers with a drive to continue designing stuff to fulfil their creative passion.

I write design tutorials

6c1d3 2 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

As I’m sure most of you who have visited my blogs before know, I write design tutorials that describe the process of building certain types of designs or how to recreate particular effects. These tutorials are commonly for Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop or HTML/CSS web design topics.

Why people hate me for this

It has been mentioned by a good selection of people in the design industry that design tutorials are ruining the community, creating nothing more than an army of zombie designers who are coming into the industry with no skills except being able to follow a step by step guide to create ‘cookie-cutter’ styles and effects.

Why people love me for this

Many designers, including myself have used design tutorials as an insanely valuable resource for getting to grips with the design software we’re required to use in this industry. Students and veteran designers alike have used my tutorials to boost their knowledge and develop their skills in Illustrator, Photoshop and in general web design. They’ve learnt new tips and techniques that they’ve then been able to put into practice in their subsequent design projects.

Why I keep doing it

I receive awesome emails every day from people thanking me for sharing my design knowledge through tutorials. Many have stated that my tutorials have seen them through college/university and a few teachers and lecturers have even explained how their classes have been based on my tutorials. I always post out my guides to explain processes so designers can put these techniques into effect in their own projects. The large majority of designers take the foundations from my tutorials and build on them using their own knowledge. This doesn’t sound like an army of zombie designers at all in my opinion.

I write list posts

6c1d3 3 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

List posts is the term that has been given to posts on design blogs that do nothing more than showcase a number of designs purely for visual interest or inspiration. List posts don’t provide any knowledge, facts or opinions but they’re the amongst the most trafficked type of post.

Why people hate me for this

Due to their success in bringing in huge traffic list posts have become over-used to the point where some list posts don’t even have a specific focus on what they are showcasing. Now, list posts and the blogs that post them are seen to be ruining the community by saturating it with content that has no intellectual value.

Why people love me for this

List posts are amongst the most highest trafficked and best performing posts a blog can post. Many people enjoy them because they’re easy to digest and provide useful visual inspiration that can help generate ideas for a designer’s upcoming projects. The list posts I create are usually roundups of resources or a showcase of designs all created with a particular style – All of them are well received by a large portion of my readers and subsequently receive the most traffic, social votes and comments.

Why I keep doing it

List posts don’t particularly take a lot of effort to produce, when compared to design tutorials and thoughtful articles, yet they always receive almost double the attention. I use the roundups and showcases to quickly put together posts when I’m short on time, or to give my blog a boost in traffic if stats are running low. Most importantly I enjoy creating list posts to discover new resources or design trends I can play around with myself, and furthermore share these things with my readers. In my opinion other types of articles are important to develop a blog in the long term, but I’ll always produce the odd list post as long as they receive the traffic, social votes and exposure they do today.

I write catchy titles

6c1d3 4 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

Attention grabbing titles aren’t anything new to the blogging world. They’re used extensively in the real world in everything from newspapers to advertising and marketing. A catchy title will usually ‘big up’ its content using exciting adjectives between the key words in the heading.

Why people hate me for this

Some people feel cheated if they follow a link that doesn’t turn out to be as interesting as the title suggested. In some of my titles I’ve been criticised of using the word ‘awesome’, because that particular person only deemed the design worthy of ‘cool’ (true story!). Some of my post titles have provided high expectations as to what the viewer will see, which has resulted in disappointment in the past.

Why people love me for this

In most cases people have followed a link from social websites such as Twitter because the title sounded interesting and have subsequently enjoyed my content. Those people may have missed out if the title used simple or plain wording to describe the post. ‘How To Create a Colorful Abstract Design in Illustrator’ will always perform better than ‘How To Create a Design in Illustrator’.

Why I keep doing it

As long as newspapers and advertising companies use intriguing headlines in their content, I’ll continue to use vibrant adjectives or metaphors in my titles to inject excitement into my posts. People click on interesting, exciting or thought provoking titles while plain or boring wording simply passes them by.

I promote my posts too much

6c1d3 5 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

Every week I post a new article and tweet out links to my followers on Twitter. Due to the differences in time zones and the general working of Twitter I post the same link multiple times throughout the week in the morning, afternoon and evenings on different days.

Why people hate me for this

People hate being spammed. Unfortunately some of my repeated tweets catch a select number of people multiple times throughout their day or week. This can be annoying, particularly for those who don’t follow many people as the same link from the same person can quickly fill the whole Twitter stream on third party apps.

Why people love me for this

For every person who is unfortunate enough to be online to see a repeated tweet the second, third and even fourth time throughout a given week there is always a larger proportion of people who are seeing it for the first time. These people would have otherwise missed out on the news. Even on the fourth time a link is posted it receives just as many favourites and retweets.

Why I keep doing it

The obvious reason I keep retweeting is to squeeze out as much attention on my posts as possible as I only post one main topic per week, unlike other blogs who post every day. I’m forever aiming to get feedback from people who are getting annoyed from seeing my tweets multiple times and have recently decreased the number of times I re-post. However I’ll always schedule up multiple tweets in order to catch people across different time zones.

I tweet too much in general

5088b 6 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

Every now and again I’ll run through my RSS feed and tweet out links to the design articles I found interesting. A year or two ago I posted a link every 15 minutes, nowadays I’ve had to decrease it to one tweet per hour or less.

Why people hate me for this

Even if the content I’m tweeting isn’t my own, if my tweets are too closely timed in that they fill the stream of users who don’t follow many people it quickly becomes annoying. It doesn’t take long for people to label you as a spammer.

Why people love me for this

I’ve managed to build a following of over 40,000 people on Twitter primarily from tweeting useful design links. This has always added value to my profile in that designers receive tips of interesting articles and tutorials as well as general life updates and conversational tweets.

Why I keep doing it

The large majority of my followers enjoy receiving design links, but I’m always aiming to spread out these links in order to avoid ‘spamming’ those who don’t have an active Twitter stream. At the moment I post one design link per hour after picking out topics from my RSS feeds. I’ll stick to this frequency until more complaints are sent my way.

I display ads on my blogs

5088b 7 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

Over the past four years my blogs have reached a level in terms of visitors, subscribers and search engine rankings that it has become lucrative to earn revenue from selling advertising space. Currently I have a series of 125px ads in the sidebar, and a larger ad above the content on older posts.

Why people hate me for this

Earning money for doing something that isn’t considered ‘hard work’ or ‘skillful’ can often be frowned upon. To some earning money from writing blog posts, tutorials and articles isn’t something you should be doing. The ads on my websites to some people cause too much of a distraction or don’t fit in with their ethical views.

Why people love me for this

Some people find my content hugely beneficial to them and enjoy seeing revenue being generated in return. I’ve also heard from many who have found the story of my blog and how it has changed my life inspirational and have given them the drive to earn money from doing something they love.

Why I keep doing it

Ever since I first introduced an ad spot on my blogs I’ve always aimed to keep them non-intrusive. There are plenty of advertising opportunities I don’t make use of, many of which can be seen on larger design blogs. Earning passive income and more so a living from a website is something everyone wishes for, so it’s a dream come true that I have the opportunity to do so.

I post content that isn’t design related

5088b 8 Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

On my Twitter and Facebook accounts I’ll often post out photos of my dog, general life updates or gameplays from my Black Ops gaming hobby. Generally people follow me because they have an interest in my personally, others only want to receive updates based on the topic of design.

Why people hate me for this

Many people know of me and follow me on social websites for design related knowledge, updates and links. Dog photos, general updates, what music I’m listening to and gaming links aren’t something they want to know about. Anything other than design content can quickly result in the ‘spamming’ of their accounts.

Why people love me for this

It’s awesome that I’ve made so many friends and contact via Twitter and other social networking sites who have an interest in me personally. Most often I’ll find people with similar interests when I post non-design related content and in most cases I find it helps develop these friendships and bonds beyond my blogs.

Why I keep doing it

I’ve always built my blogs and profiles around myself as a person, rather than a company, so general life updates and tweets based on my hobbies and interests will continue. Design is obviously my largest passion so that kind of content will be in the majority but there will always be dog photos and gaming links. Setting up multiple profiles to post different content simply isn’t practical, nor would those updates go out to the people who would otherwise enjoy them.

The moral of the story

So basically what I wanted to point out is that no matter what you do there will always be a selection of people who disagree with what you’re doing. The question is how much notice should you take? If you were to try to please everyone, no one would be happy. I personally try to balance things in order to keep as many people happy as possible, but I’ll always look at the bigger picture and try to figure out what the general consensus is.

It’s also worth noting that usually positive feedback will be much more scarce than negative feedback, but you can often discover how people feel by checking behind the scenes at statistics and trends.
Let’s take list posts for example. You don’t need to look far to see how hated they are by a fairly large portion of people. There’s tweets and blog posts describing how terrible they are so it would be easy to assume they’re worthless. But looking at the traffic statistics and seeing how much more popular these posts are than thought-provoking articles and tutorials just goes to show the larger majority of the audience, although they don’t vocally express their opinion, do actually enjoy them.

Why do you hate/love me?

So to finish off I thought it would be fun to ask for your opinions in terms of what I do online. What do you love/hate about me? What would you change? And what are your thoughts about balancing between negative and positive feedback?
Hopefully this doesn’t end up with me sobbing in the corner icon wink Why People Love & Hate Me in the Design Community

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Four Constants in the Ever-changing Web Design Industry

0028 01 constants changing webindustry Four Constants in the Ever changing Web Design Industry Read the rest of this entry »

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