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Article
Directory Website Design: Understanding the Essential Basics
If
you have done any article directory surfing, you have probably
noticed all types of article directory designs. You may have
run across those that are visually impressive and enjoyable
to look at it. They make you stop and ask yourself the following
questions: "How can I make an attractive design like that?"
Then you have probably run across those site that have inflicted
pain onto your eyeballs and you have probably questioned yourself,
"How do I avoid that?" So many people do not understand the
essential basics to creating a visually pleasing website design.
Let us take a look at these four important and basic subjects
of design.
Contrast
Most
of us understand the concept of contrast, yet when you look
at different website designs, we often see this concept ignored.
Contrast needs to be highly considered when creating any type
of website. Ultimately, you want the visitor to come in contact
with the content and information of the website. Your visitor
does not want to have to *dig* through your website to find
the information for which he or she is looking. If your content
is hidden, people will miss the purpose of your website and
simply give up trying to find the information or article they
need. Reader's eyes want a visible and clear presentation.
To
put contrast in exercise, highly and carefully consider the
colors you are using for your website design. The type of
contrast you are looking for is black text on a white background.
While that may seem boring, it is most important that your
background contrasts with your text so your text is clearly
visible and seen. Another mistake you will often see is the
overuse of graphics and images. Use graphics wisely! Too many
graphics can clutter your website and make your content buried.
A graphic-laden page does not necessarily mean it will be
more visually pleasing.
Contrast
is a simple and effective way to visually enhance your website.
Remember, that you want to bring the content to your reader.
You do not want your reader to have todig for it.
Alignment
The
second concept, alignment, is also extremely vital to the
website presentation. Good alignment brings about unity and
order. Bad alignment brings about chaos and disorder. Knowing
that we want to bring content and contextual components to
our visitor, we need to present that content in an orderly
fashion. The basic principle for alignment is this: do not
mix alignment styles. For example, if you have left aligned
text, do not create a centered heading. You want your design
to flow. That brings us to our next concept, repetition.
Repetition
While
providing your website visitor with clear, visible orderly
content, you can also create a stronger sense of unity in
the website through repetition. Repetition on a website basically
means that you use the same design elements throughout the
design. That means you want to use the same logo, graphics,
bullets, fonts, and colors. A common misconception by amateur
designers is that the more color on the page you have, the
more visually pleasing it is. Experience and good judgement
show that this is simply not true. Stick to four similar contrasting
colors. Stay consistent with your fonts. Stay consistent with
your graphics. Repetition will further the sense of the unity
in your document.
Proximity
Proximity
ties in with presenting easy-to-find content to your website
visitor. Proximity is not a hard principle to follow and it
will greatly increase your website's readability. To follow
the concept of proximity, put elements together that should
be together. For example, if you are talking about a book,
you do not want to have the book title at the top of the page,
the author at the bottom of the page, and the publisher of
the book on a completely different page. To re-emphasize,
you want your visitor to find what they are looking for easily.
Proximity best assists your viewers in finding exactly what
they need, when they need it.
Following
these basic design principles will allow you to make a sharp
and attractive website. Remember, you want the content to
find the visitor. You do not want the visitor to have to dig
through the design to find the content that they need. When
the content finds the visitor, you want it to be unified,
clear, and visible. Exercise these four basic concepts, and
you will have yourself a very visually pleasing design for
your article directory
or website.
Brett
McQueen is freelance author, web designer and programmer,
and the administrator for the Article
Cat free
article directory and catalog.
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