Websitepalooza: Part Deux coming soon

By Tim Priebe on June 23, 2010 at 12:54 pm in General

Websitepalooza: Part Deux is coming on July 22. Websites while you wait. More info coming soon…

Websitepalooza: Part Deux

Can you find the mistake? We obviously failed.

By Emily Spirek on November 20, 2009 at 1:57 pm in Business Identity, Design, General

Case in point. Web is better than print.picture-23

Okay, not all the time, but when you find a mistake 10 weeks down the road, website has been launched, and it’s been through the hands of at least half a dozen people, thousands of dollars aren’t poured into correcting the piddly error.

We might suffer a little embarrassment and swallow our pride until the inaccuracy is forgotten, but we don’t waste the time and money that goes into reprinting the project. We simply redesign and/or work our magic in the code and voilà, error fixed.

Of course, print products (business cards, brochures, etc.) can be necessary for a business, but we are a big fan of instant gratification in the web industry. Besides our other 99 reasons to buy a website, the idea of quick and easy fixes is one of our biggest.

I’m guessing you’ve found the mistake in the screenshot above by now, and if not, you make us feel a lot better about ourselves. Check out the new and improved JJH Media.

Websitepalooza coming soon…

By Tim Priebe on October 1, 2009 at 7:05 pm in General

Websitepalooza is coming on October 29th 30th. Websites while you wait. More info coming soon…

websitepalooza

Free One Page Website Workshop

By Tim Priebe on July 18, 2009 at 10:39 am in Technical, Workshops, freebies

Laptop in Field - One Page Website WorkshopJoin us for this free workshop! In an hour and a half, learn how to create a website and get it online.

We’ll be providing attendees with several one page website templates to choose from. Then you’ll learn how to fill in your template with actual content.

Once your one page website is ready, we’ll show you how to purchase a domain name and hosting, so your website has a place to live online.

Finally, we’ll look at testing and uploading the final website.

We’d love to see you at this event. If you think you might come, please RSVP through our One Page Website Workshop event page on Facebook.

The Fireworks Advantage

By Dave Roach on January 22, 2009 at 4:14 pm in Design, Development, Reviews

Adobe Fireworks CS4 BoxFireworks is often overlooked. Many (most) web designers today use Photoshop to design their websites, and a lot of them have never considered or (*gasp) even heard of Fireworks. Adobe Fireworks is made for creating websites. That is what it was built for, and it does it well. Fireworks enables you to rapidly prototype and design for the web. With it you can create a clickable PDF that will act as a prototype. Also, you can quickly create export and optimize slices (Fireworks is better at optimizing images than Photoshop).

Now don’t get me wrong, Photoshop is an extremely powerful tool and is amazing; it has way more features than Fireworks, but if all you are doing is designing websites, then you should use software that was specifically made for doing just that. Another excellent feature to note about Fireworks is that it is compatible with Photoshop. For the most part, you can open a psd in Fireworks, and it will recognize all of your layers and styles, and with CS4, compatability between Adobe’s programs have been further improved.

If you are a web designer and have not looked into using Fireworks, you should at least try it out and see for yourself how efficient it really is. There are hundreds of other excellent features Fireworks has to offer, read more about them at Adobe’s site.

Rounded Corners vs. Rounded Corners in Fireworks

By Dave Roach on January 13, 2009 at 6:26 pm in Design, Development, How-To

When designing a site in Fireworks, I have found that working with rounded corners can be a bit tricky if you don’t know some specifics. First off, there are two main ways to make rounded corners, the rectangle tool, and the rounded rectangle tool.

tools

When using the rectangle tool, you can round the corners by using the ‘rectangle roundness’ slider on the properties panel. Yes, this creates pretty rounded corners, but a couple problems can arise when using this method.

slider

First off, the rectangle roundness is relative to the size of the rectangle. If you have two rectangles of different sizes, both at 50 rectangle roundness, they will not appear the same.

roundness-50

Someone using this method to try and match corners will end up being off by a couple pixels, which can be crucial when it comes to coding.

So this is where the rounded rectangle tool comes in handy. When you create a rounded rectangle, you can just use the yellow handles to resize the entire rectangle and to adjust the roundness, even specific corners. Even better, resizing the rectangle via the yellow handle will not affect the roundness (unless you make it super tiny).

handles

Sounds easy enough, right? Well yes, but there are unseen issues here. When designing a site, pixels matter. For this reason, I like to type in the width and height of my rounded rectangle in the properties panel. The problem with this is that if you type values for a rounded rectangle it stretches it. It does not matter which method you use, the rectangle will stretch, and your corners will stretch as well. Luckily, there is an excellent solution to this problem!

numeric

What you need to do is to convert your rectangle into a symbol. You can make as many states of a symbol as you want, and then all you need to do is change one symbol and they all will change accordingly. Let me walk you through it.

First off, make a rounded rectangle with the rounded rectangle tool. Doesn’t matter the size or color.

Next, select the rectangle, and hit F8. Name the symbol whatever you want, make the type a graphic, and check the box that says “Enable 9-slice scaling guides” and click OK. Congratulations, you have made a symbol.

symbol

Now you need to double click on your symbol to go inside of it and edit it. In the window that pops up, you can resize, recolor, change the roundness of your  rectangle, apply filters, whatever you want. Then what you need to do it set up the 9-slice scaling guides. These guides allow you to resize your rectangle (outside of the symbol editing window) without distorting the corners. Just align the guides so that the rounded edges are outside of the guides.

guides

Now you can exit the symbol editing window and resize your rounded rectangle with the transform tool or by typing in the values in the properties panel. The only thing you need to watch out for is making the rectangle too small. If you shrink it so the corners meet, then they will distort like before.

The great thing about using symbols for rounded rectangles is that you can duplicate them and then edit one symbol’s corners and all instances of that symbol will change, no matter what size they are. This is especially useful if you change your mind later in the design process. Using symbols is really easy once you get used to them, and can streamline the web development process.

symbol-sizes

Printing is a Pain

By Emily Spirek on October 21, 2008 at 6:30 am in Design, General

I started designing my junior year of high school and was only introduced to print material at the time. The pain of matching of colors, printing costs, margins, sizing, and everything that printing entails was never a big deal because I had nothing to compare it to. Five years of naivety finally ended when I was introduced to the wonderful world of web design. Sure, designing web pages has its downfalls, but the headache is cut in half when comparing it to print.

I love designing logos, business cards, brochures, etc, but I always dread the end when I have to remember the laundry list of steps to prepare the files for print. Creating outlines, correct file formats, matching margins, fixing spelling errors, the list goes on. Then, probably the most nerve-racking part of it all is looking at the finished product. If there is one spelling error, the entire job is ruined and now the trouble shooting begins. I love creating a good piece of print work, but sometimes I wonder if it’s worth the struggle. Jeff Jarvis from Buzz Machine Blog gives a piece of his mind:

“Yes, print is a burden. It’s expensive to produce for it. It’s expensive to manufacture. It’s expensive to deliver. It limits your space. It limits your timing. It’s stale when it’s fresh. It is one-size-fits-all and can’t be adapted to the needs of each user. It comes with no ability to click for more. It has no search. It can’t be forwarded. It has no archive. It kills trees. It uses energy. It usually brings unions. And you really should recycle it. Wow, when you think about it, print sucks.”

I wouldn’t say that I hate print, but I have a strong disdain for it and I only hope it will get easier in the future.