creative design
3D viewers and plug-ins
/0 Comments/in Articles, Creative design /by Art-DAbout FCI products
Using FSI Viewer you can present high resolution images of 10,000 by 10,000 pixel and above on-line requiring low bandwidth only enabling the user to freely zoom, pan and rotate the image. FSI Viewer requests image data from Single Source Imaging Servers capable of serving images and image sections in different dimensions and formats on-demand based on a single high resolution source image.
Therefore authoring of FSI Viewer requires passing the path to the source image only and does not require any manual image preparation or authoring software.
The way FSI Viewer retrieves images ensures perfect caching of image data. Providing source images showing an object from different viewing angles even allows you to create virtual 3D presentations. As FSI Viewer is based on Adobe Flash Player your visitors can instantly use FSI Viewer without the need to setup a browser plug-in.
Banner Design Success Techniques
/0 Comments/in Articles, Creative design, Graphic design, Web design and promotion /by Art-DBanners have been a major part of the World Wide Web world since its early days. Copywriters burn the midnight oil looking for new designs that will grab the visitor’s attention and compel him to click on their banner. This article discusses some of the most successful banner designs. Read more
Web Designers vs. Print Designers
/0 Comments/in Articles, Creative design, Graphic design, Print design, Web design /by Art-D Many Web designers come to the Web with a print background. Either they were print designers, or they are just used to the control that a print world gives. When you print something, it provides permanence and stability. You don’t have this on the Web.
The problem is, that it’s easy to forget. When you build your Web page and test it in your browser, you get it looking exactly how you want it to look. But then you test it in a different browser, and it looks different. And if you move to a different platform, it will look differently again.
As you’re a designer, you’ll need to work with customers. You will be doing them and yourself a disservice if you don’t explain the difference between print and the Web. Especially if you bring your portfolio as print outs. This is a common problem, where the customer expects the printout to represent exactly what the page will look like.
What To Do? Working with Customers
Printouts as a Portfolio
It is always important to have a portfolio, but remember that the Web is not print, and bringing a print out is not a strong representation of your Web site design skills.
- Setting Expectations
Be up-front with your customers. If they want their page to have very specific layout, font, and design elements, be sure to explain the tradeoffs such as download speed and maintenance before simply building them a completely graphical page. - Know what your customer uses
If you’re a big Netscape on the Mac fan, and your client only uses Internet Explorer for Windows, you should keep this in mind in your designs. Your page could look very different to them.
- Know your audience
Know the characteristics of the audience of the site you’re building. If they are propellor-heads, they might browse in Unix on a 21 inch monitor. Or if they are more conservative they might have a 12 inch monitor running Internet Explorer 3. If you design a site that suits your audience, your customer won’t be complaining to you later. - Test test test
Test your designs in every browser and OS combination that you can get your hands on. Emulators work if you have no other choice, but there is no substitute for hands on experience. - Don’t forget resolution
Browsers and OS are important, but if your readers and customers are browsing on a smaller screen than you design on, they could be unpleasantly surprised.
The Web is Not Print
While it is possible, with CSS, to get very precise layouts, but it will never be as precise as print. If you can remember that as you’re designing your Web pages, you’ll save yourself a lot of stress.