Rookie mag is a blog/magazine for teen girls. The website it really photography heavy. A lot of the featured images are artwork from their viewers. There's a really creative vibe to their posts, and the whole website is pretty edgy. The best part is that there's nothing complicated about what makes their site great. It's just pictures and art that gives the website its visual appeal. Poster: Spencer Source: Rookie Mag |
0 Comments
This website does a great job of using feature images to draw attention to its stories. The set-up is easy to understand and the website is easily navigable. Its photo sequences are interesting and engage the audience. Poster: Matthew
Source: worldpressphoto.org This website allows you look at any tweet anyone has posted from all around the world.
Poster: Raven Source: Webtrends. com This magazine has a really nice, minimal looking design which keeps the site clean and less cluttered. It also hel
Apparently Lamborghini also crafts phones and ear buds too, but the website is just really, really well designed. If you have time, go look at it. The pictures are all high quality, and the animations for each slide is not laggy at all.
Source - Lamborghini website Poster - Dylan This website has a really classy design. Not only it is classy, it is also interactive, it didn't put many distracting variables so the visitors can concentrate on what they are selling. By the way, they sell phones about ~$15,000 average.
Source - Vertu Poster - Dylan This website for Phoenix, a creative studio, is really simple and fun to use. Every time you refresh the website's main page, a new background picture appears, which is cute. On the other pages of the site, as you scroll down, bits of the page appear. It's a neat, discover-as-you-go kind of website.
Source: http://www.phoenix.cool/ Poster: Ariana This website has great graphics that are very clear and appealing. By using a parallax structure, the company is able to showcase a larger display of their product. In order to implement this strategy, we should use parallax more- especially when the content is worthy.
source: Fuse Collective poster: Hannah This website provides different radio stations to listen to in a cute, colorful layout. It appears welcoming and uplifting with circular shapes and a light blue color.
Source: Dash Radio Poster: Sydney Road America is a famous racetrack commonly used for international races, the website itself is similar to the layout of our website design, with the exception of a few minor details.
Source: Roadamerica.com Poster: Miles This magazine website has a simple layout but I like how it displays pictures and previews of stories when your mouse hovers on the tabs.
Source: Relevant Magazine Poster: Olivia I like how this website has videos ready to click on, so just when you start scrolling, you have content in your immediate attention, you don't have to search for it. Also, it's just really beautiful.
Source: New York City Ballet Poster: Caryn The website for the new Armani glasses features a large display for the homepage, with a prominence of the images rather than text. Source: awwwards Poster: Ridah Emma Job is a still life photographer in London and she mixes her photos in her website to make a bigger art masterpiece.
Poster: Kat Source: emmajob.com
https://www.fan.tv/
This is a website in which you can keep up with your fanfics. Poster: Raven SOurce: Fan tv So this was an interactive little story thing Google put out recently, it basically highlights all the successful "experiments" they've done. It's hard to explain, but you should check it out. We couldn't exactly do this on our site, but it's a fun inspiration of what's possible.
Poster: Megan Source: Google Creative Lab This website has several cool features, including a computer screen that changes categories when you scroll. It's visually appealing and makes me want to explore the website even though I have no interest in what it's trying to sell to me. Poster: Matthew
This website clearly shows the company and their product. By using extremely good quality photos, their product seems more appealing and worthwhile.
source: Poco People poster: Hannah This website has many categories that are greatly organized and they all fit each other. There are many stories that allow interaction and none of them are duplicates which makes the website feel loaded with content.
Poster - Dylan Source - Rolling Stone Ok, this website may be familiar to you guys. I don't know if you guys noticed, but this website has a similar front page format to our site- at least the top portion of the site is. The top portion of the website does not have a super big picture that makes the web visitors to jump out of their chair.. unlike our site. Hopefully our web design could be like this in the future.
Poster - Dylan So I'm a little bit of a self-help junkie, and I've known this site for a while. I think it has something in common with the The Rider Online that we looked at today while going over the Austin notes...
It's clean. And super minimalist. I think a more minimalist format for a website forces the content that is posted to be the hook and attention-snatcher. Of course, this website is extremely minimalist, and I picture the guy that writes the blog to speak in a really monotone whisper almost like really excrutiating guided meditation. But the content is good and hearty, and I think the success of this website says a lot about how a more minimalist design can redirect the focus on the content. Poster: Spencer Source: zenhabits.net This website has different DIY instructions and has a unique, fun design. Its split into different sections gardening, bikes, and robots.
Poster: Sydney Forbes is one of the most successful and looked at publications in the business world whether it be online or the magazine. Forbes has a very simplistic design and is able to display more of their top stories than we are able too.
Source: Forbes Poster: Miles This website for a MoMA exhibit is super neat. Although it's a tad confusing, it is colorful and fun.
Source: MoMA Poster: Ariana |
Web Design
Layout, infographics, things that move. CategoriesArchives
May 2015
|