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The Quilt
07/01/10
One thing about this “Photo a Day” challenge I’m participating in: I can’t wait til I’m “in the mood” to take pictures. I have to look for things to shoot some days; I guess that’s the purpose – to see more photo opportunities around me every day.
This is the beginning of a quilt for a very dear friend of mine. He laughingly commented that he wanted a doll and a quilt – so I’m making him a teddy bear and a quilt (which will be sized for the bear). I didn’t figure he really wanted a doll…
He’s away from home for a few days, and I hope to have it all done by the time he gets back. He’s been going through a rough patch, and I hope this will remind him that he has friends who love him and are thinking about him.
On my new server…
30/06/09
I’ve got my website up on the new hosting package, and as you can see, I also have the blog moved over to the new server as well.
Just want to welcome everyone to the new site- there will be more changes to the site and the blog – some will be cosmetic, but I’ll be adding more of my photography work as I get the system set up as I want it.
thanks again for stopping by!
Fluid Design
20/11/08
For as long as I’ve been designing websites, I’ve almost always designed using a fluid design- one that is set up so that it ‘fits’ the screen of the viewer, as often as possible. Obviously you can’t fit everyone’s screen, because some people use a small portion of their monitor to view the internet, saving another portion for their other open apps.
However, I feel this is the best way to go for most sites. If I use tables in the design, I set them so that they only use a percentage of the screen size. I did have a client who had purchased a template online, and we made some adjustments to it to customize for their site – he actually pulled out a ruler and showed me that the lines on each side of the design were not the same width, even though I had them set at the same pixel width. He also wanted the site to be perfect on his monitor, which was a fairly large one…
The problem with making a site ‘perfect’ on your monitor? You’re forgetting that your customer is who you should be building your site for. My goal for website customers is to make a site that visitors can easily navigate, will enjoy viewing, looks good on their monitor, and is easily readable to them. That usually means, among other things, that I don’t set exact font sizes in the design, but rather set it at ‘large’ or ‘medium’ according to how the font looks.
I do this for one simple reason – if I am on a site with tiny print, I will hold my CTRL button and use the scroll wheel on my mouse to enlarge it – if that doesn’t work, I usually don’t hang around very long. Life is too short to strain my eyes trying to read something in microscopic print.
Any site needs to look good, but it’s most important that viewers can use it easily – and if they can’t, what is that saying to them? “If you’re not cool enough to use this site, then we don’t want your business” is what it says to me. And I don’t want to be responsible for a site that’s saying that.