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Custom
Web Site Design or Website Templates - The Big Debate
A
lot of custom web site designers are really critical of commercial
website templates. I have seen snide comments on Forums and
Blogs along the lines of 'This site has template written all
over it'. There are two main reasons not to like templates,
and then some ways to mitigate these problems.
Let's
explore these.
Templates
are not original There is something to be said for creating
your own, all original work. But there is a difference between
being somewhat artistic and being an artist with the capability
of bringing together all the elements of a website headers,
judicious use of graphics, menus and layout into a cohesive
and pleasing whole. Not to talk about creating a website with
a definite wow factor and one that loads fast to boot.
I
discovered soon in my website design career that I am just
not quite artistic enough to really create the effect that
I was looking for. My first websites were all created from
scratch by hand and I spent hours and hours on choosing the
right colours, selecting the graphics, optimizing the graphics
and designing the menus with the right rollover effects.
The
most frustrating thing was that after my masterpiece was designed,
it still fell far short of some of the other websites that
I regularly came across in my travels on the Internet.
Now,
professionally designed website templates are, as the name
implies, designed by professional graphic designers. They
might not be professional website designers as such since
these templates often have certain intrinsic flaws, however,
most of the time the look and feel created by the template,
especially its graphical elements, work together in a way
that is difficult to achieve for someone without either years
of practice or formal training (not to talk of intrinsic artistic
capabilities and talent!)
But
let's look at the second reason why people don't like templates:
Templates
are often badly designed from a website design perspective
Website templates might look nice on the outside, but any
experienced website designer will tell you that under the
hood they suffer from the following problems:
1.
In most cases they do not make use of Cascading Style Sheets
to control layout, fonts or colours. Some of them nominally
make use of an external css file but most of the times style
commands abound inside the html code, often negating the benefit
of the external style sheet.
2.
Probably the biggest problem and biggest bugbear of web design
purists is that most of these templates are heavily tables
based. While tables undeniably make it easy to quickly position
text and graphics it does go against the grain of good website
design. Tables are supposed to contain content, not website
design elements.
3.
The last big problem is that they are rigid. Often a content
block is a specific size and if your content does not fit
into that, it is your problem! Because the content and the
presentation are not separated it is very easy to break the
template if you want to make extensive changes to your website
content.
So
how can these persuasive negatives related to the use of templates
be overcome? Firstly, the fact that there might be another
site out there somewhere that might have the same look should
not really be a deterrent. There are over 8 billion pages
on the Internet, according to Google. Admittedly there are
fewer websites than pages but even at 16 pages on average
per website, we might have close on 500 Million possible websites.
What are the chances? But there are things that can be done
to minimise the screaming template effect:
1.
The stock photos and graphics used on the template can often
be replaced by photos of the company or person that the website
is being designed for. Even just using other stock photos
or graphics can make a big difference.
2.
Company logos can be incorporated into relevant places
3.
Sometimes the whole colour scheme can be changed by making
use of tools such as Photoshop or Fireworks.
Secondly,
the bad design elements of the template can be addressed in
the following way:
After
all the effort that I put into designing my websites from
scratch I soon ran into the problem of maintenance. Successful
websites need content. They need lots of content and they
need content to be added in a constant stream. The only tool
that can help you do this is some form of Content Management
System.
There
are several of these available commercially or under the GPL
license; people have their own favourites. The point is that
most Content Management Systems work on the principle of separating
the content from the presentation, and therefore work on some
sort of template system themselves.
The
best solution therefore is to convert the commercial website
template into the CMS template format. I often convert commercial
website templates, after suitable modifications to the graphics
to personalise it, into my favourite CMS Joomla's, template
format. During the process I retain the graphics but move
all the styling into an external style sheet; I get rid of
the tables and make use of CSS positioning. And because you
are using a CMS you can easily add menus, new pages and all
the other bits and pieces of content that you want without
breaking the layout.
As
far as I am concerned, the best of both worlds....
Christine
Anderssen is a custom website designer specialising in Content
Management Systems. You can find her at Tailormade4you
Website Design - Custom Web Site Design Services
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