Archive for the ‘Web Designing’ Category

January 22nd, 2009

Web Design Services in India for Outsourcing Opportunities

With India emerging as the most preferred destination for outsourcing web design services, Western countries, especially the United States, UK and Canada are hiring professional Indian web designers for flawless services. There are many web designing companies in India that have excelled in gaining confidence and trust of international businesses. There are many advantages of outsourcing web design India:

The quality standard maintained by web designing companies India is of top quality. Most Indian web designing firms follow the standards laid by ISO and CMM boards.

India boasts many web development companies that offer website designing, content management, logo designing, flash designing, graphic designing and ecommerce web solutions under one roof! This enables enterprises to meet their online needs.

Web design India is very cost effective. Designers create customized web designs, which are cost effective in comparison to other countries. Moreover, India boasts a high number of well-trained IT professionals who provide honest services on a part-time or full-time basis.

While outsourcing web designing services you must know some basic aspects of an accessible and user-friendly website. The appearance of a website must be simple and should not stress on excessive gadgetry or design. Just look at Google or Orkut and you will understand the impact it has on surfers.

India is a growing nation and Ahmedabad will be the next IT hub in coming years. Contact Mitul Bhavsar, an owner of Ahmedabad based  Web Design Company www.designwebgraphic.com for your web design requirement.

January 15th, 2009

Creating GIF and Jpeg Images for Your Website

The two most dominant Web image types are GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) and Jpeg (Joint Picture Experts Group). You can find the above types in most any website you visit. They both compress to a small file size and are easy to work with.

GIF: Pronounced jiff, like the peanut butter, is very good for logos and lettering. Highly detailed images don’t look good in the GIF format because it’s limited to 256 colors; rendering complex images – such as photos – with a grainy look.

Jpeg: Pronounced jay-peg, does quite well with photographs since it was originally designed for them. It is a lossy type of compression and will reduce the file size by dropping bits it doesn’t need.

General Website Preparation Guidelines:

It’s best to work with all your Web images at a much higher resolution than 72 or 96 pixels per inch (PPI). If you are creating original images, scan to at least 300 PPI. Though GIF is somewhat more forgiving of lower resolution than Jpeg, 300 PPI offers a good compromise for editing.

The reason you need to edit in high resolution is that your image manipulation and filtering will have a more detailed look when recompressed for the Web. The excellent detail of professionally crafted virtual eBook covers is on account of the high resolution image editing.

When working with logos and lettering, areas of concern are all the border lines that meet the background color. You should select two to four pixels (half on the lettering and the other half on the background) and apply a generous amount of your paint application’s smoothing filter.

Once you are done with the editing, it’s time to recompress and convert the images for use on the Web! Depending on your needs, resize the images to either 72 or 96 PPI and save them as GIF or Jpeg. Take your time and use many of the Web features of your paint application; experiment to see what is the best compromise between image size and quality.

Items to consider:

High, medium or low compression.

Colors: 16, 32, 64, 128, 256

Dither/no Dither

Of course, there are more detailed works on editing images for use on the Web; this article doesn’t pretend to be on par. Yet and still, by following the simple guidelines above, you’ll be able to produce some very decent images for your website.

January 15th, 2009

Designing a Successful Website

There are millions of websites out there, but only a small percentage of them ever reach a higher ranking or even manage to pull in more than a couple visitors a day. The World Wide Web contains a plethora of information, but the fact is that most of the information available is unqualified. Because there is so much unqualified information on the internet, you have to really stand out if you want to make your website successful.

For more details go to: www.designwebgraphic.com anyone can show up and start a website related to topics they barely know of. But only a handful of people actually understand their topic or scope and capitalize successfully. It is that handful of people which makes up more than 80% of the web’s revenue.

So how exactly can you design a successful website? Here are some pointers to get you started:

1. Create unique content: Forget article spinners and replicates. They are now very easily spotted by search engine algorithms. Search engines love unique content, which means that the content you feature on your website should not be anywhere else on the web. This can only happen if you allow only qualified people to provide content, or write the content yourself.

2. Target a certain segment: Creating a multi-purpose website can be successful, but statistics have shown that niche websites are easier to generate revenue with. So stick with a single topic or scope. If you are starting a news website, try not to accept all kinds of news, but stick to news in a certain niche. Stick with a niche, formulate a plan and you are bound to succeed.

3. Encourage frequent visits: Use a mailing list to capture your subscribers and be in constant touch with them. Give them a reason to visit your website consistently and frequently. For can visit to: www.master-web-graphics.com this will generate a critical mass of interest, boosting your search engine rankings as well as your traffic.

4. Do not over-advertise: Do not fill up your website with meaningless banners or sponsors in hopes for a quick buck. Websites which have used advertising only sparsely provide a more professional look. This builds trust faster and can improve your business in the long-run.

5. Base your website on an idea: I cannot state this enough. The money is not in the website itself. It is in the underlying idea. What is your idea? Do you wish to bring the guitar community together on a single platform? Is your website catered to bringing single moms to a central platform to solve their problems? Remember, the money is in the idea.

I hope this article was informative. Remember, anyone can design a website. Only a handful people are able to do it correctly and reap amazing benefits.

December 16th, 2008

Top 3 Social Networking Web Design Tips

We have seen many social networking sites to gain quick popularity while a very few didn’t make it up to the mark. With almost one year now, through which the social networking websites gained ultimate popularity, now is the ideal time to look into the successful social networks for some unique social networking web design tips. Here are 5 main points that has to be noted for a successful social networking website design.

3. Learning from the mistakes that other social networks have made
As already said, while many social networking sites like myspace, Facebook etc have gained popularity, a few other social networking sites have disappeared in the Internet crowd. As the old saying goes, “The only real mistake is the one from which we learn nothing.” Hence it’s necessary to learn from the mistakes that the other social networks made. One of the biggest mistakes that some of the social networking web designers make is overloading their web page with heavy graphics. They have a misconception that attracting visitors to social networking website depends all on eye candy. Loading a web page with heavy graphics will end up in longer load times. The visitors of your website won’t be patient enough to wait for the page to load. This will make the visitors quit from the page and they never return to your social networking website. Hence make the social networking web design simple and user friendly.  

2. Increase the interactivity of your Social Networking website
With the advancements in online marketing and SEO techniques, driving visitors to your social networking website is easy today. It’s upto the effective social networking web design to make the visitors spend some time in your site and also become returning users. For this, some interactive stuff must be added to the social networking website. Apart from the common social networking features like making friends and exchanging messages some other interactive fun stuff can be added to the social networking website. The social networking softwares come in handy here. There are many social networking software that can be used in your social networking website, which will be fun for the users. They will be pleased to return to your site to use the social networking applications and moreover, they will refer your site to their fiends too.

1. Be unique
Social networking websites are emerging like mushrooms today. At this point, just think in a social networking users point to view. With thousands of social networking websites out there, why should they choose your social networking website? The answer is simple “Make it unique”. Provide the visitors of your social networking website something that the similar networks haven’t offered. Be sure that the unique offerings at your social networks are useful too.

Bottom line
People consider privacy much more important than anything today. Hence it is essential for your social networking web design to ensure the privacy of the visitors of your site.

December 16th, 2008

Understanding Web Design

We get better design when we understand our medium. Yet even at this late cultural hour, many people don’t understand web design. Among them can be found some of our most distinguished business and cultural leaders, including a few who possess a profound grasp of design—except as it relates to the web.

Some who don’t understand web design nevertheless have the job of creating websites or supervising web designers and developers. Others who don’t understand web design are nevertheless professionally charged with evaluating it on behalf of the rest of us. Those who understand the least make the most noise. They are the ones leading charges, slamming doors, and throwing money—at all the wrong people and things.

If we want better sites, better work, and better-informed clients, the need to educate begins with us.

Preferring real estate to architecture
It’s hard to understand web design when you don’t understand the web. And it’s hard to understand the web when those who are paid to explain it either don’t get it themselves, or are obliged for commercial reasons to suppress some of what they know, emphasizing the Barnumesque over the brilliant.

The news media too often gets it wrong. Too much internet journalism follows the money; too little covers art and ideas. Driven by editors pressured by publishers worried about vanishing advertisers, even journalists who understand the web spend most of their time writing about deals and quoting dealmakers. Many do this even when the statement they’re quoting is patently self-serving and ludicrous—like Zuckerberg’s Law.

It’s not that Zuckerberg’s not news; and it’s not that business isn’t some journalists’ beat. But focusing on business to the exclusion of all else is like reporting on real estate deals while ignoring architecture.

And one tires of the news narrative’s one-dimensionalism. In 1994, the web was weird and wild, they told us. In ‘99 it was a kingmaker; in ‘01, a bust. In ‘02, news folk discovered blogs; in ‘04, perspiring guest bloggers on CNN explained how citizen journalists were reinventing news and democracy and would determine who won that year’s presidential election. I forget how that one turned out.

When absurd predictions die ridiculous deaths, nobody resigns from the newsroom, they just throw a new line into the water—like marketers replacing a slogan that tanked. After decades of news commoditization, what’s amazing is how many good reporters there still are, and how hard many try to lay accurate information before the public. Sometimes you can almost hear it beneath the roar of the grotesque and the exceptional.

The sustainable circle of self-regard
News media are not the only ones getting it wrong. Professional associations get it wrong every day, and commemorate their wrongness with an annual festival. Each year, advertising and design magazines and professional organizations hold contests for “new media design” judged by the winners of last year’s competitions. That they call it “new media design” tells them nothing and you and me everything.

Although there are exceptions, for the most part the creators of winning entries see the web as a vehicle for advertising and marketing campaigns in which the user passively experiences Flash and video content. For the active user, there is gaming—but what you and I think of as active web use is limited to clicking a “Digg this page” button.

The winning sites look fabulous as screen shots in glossy design annuals. When the winners become judges, they reward work like their own. Thus sites that behave like TV and look good between covers continue to be created, and a generation of clients and art directors thinks that stuff is the cream of web design.

Design critics get it wrong, too
People who are smart about print can be less bright about the web. Their critical faculties, honed to perfection during the Kerning Wars, smash to bits against the barricades of our profession.

The less sophisticated lament on our behalf that we are stuck with ugly fonts. They wonder aloud how we can enjoy working in a medium that offers us less than absolute control over every atom of the visual experience. What they are secretly asking is whether or not we are real designers. (They suspect that we are not.) But these are the juniors, the design students and future critics. Their opinions are chiefly of interest to their professors, and one prays they have good ones.

More sophisticated critics understand that the web is not print and that limitations are part of every design discipline. Yet even these eggheads will sometimes succumb to fallacious comparatives. (I’ve done it myself, although long ago and strictly for giggles.) Where are the masterpieces of web design, these critics cry. That Google Maps might be as representative of our age as the Mona Lisa was of Leonardo’s—and as brilliant, in its way—satisfies many of us as an answer, but might not satisfy the design critic in search of a direct parallel to, oh, I don’t know, let’s say Milton Glaser’s iconic Bob Dylan poster.

Typography, architecture, and web design
The trouble is, web design, although it employs elements of graphic design and illustration, does not map to them. If one must compare the web to other media, typography would be a better choice. For a web design, like a typeface, is an environment for someone else’s expression. Stick around and I’ll tell you which site design is like Helvetica.

Architecture (the kind that uses steel and glass and stone) is also an apt comparison—or at least, more apt than poster design. The architect creates planes and grids that facilitate the dynamic behavior of people. Having designed, the architect relinquishes control. Over time, the people who use the building bring out and add to the meaning of the architect’s design.

Of course, all comparisons are gnarly by nature. What is the “London Calling” of television? Who is the Jane Austen of automotive design? Madame Butterfly is not less beautiful for having no car chase sequence, peanut butter no less tasty because it cannot dance.

So what is web design?
Web design is not book design, it is not poster design, it is not illustration, and the highest achievements of those disciplines are not what web design aims for. Although websites can be delivery systems for games and videos, and although those delivery systems can be lovely to look at, such sites are exemplars of game design and video storytelling, not of web design. So what is web design?

Web design is the creation of digital environments that facilitate and encourage human activity; reflect or adapt to individual voices and content; and change gracefully over time while always retaining their identity.