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fter we've spent some time investigating the dry theoretic
matters of XML and orthogonal design, it's time now
to get back to visual design issues. This article is an
analysis of one Web site, my own design studio at
www.kirsanov.com. Since its
launch in June 1998, the site elicited a number of comments from
surfers and generated a wave of interested business inquiries.
In fact, dissecting and explaining my own design decisions in
building the site is as interesting for myself as it may be for my
readers. In the creative process, many decisions are made
subconsciously and are never verbalized unless the author takes the
trouble of doing so. Of course anything you achieve in a project
is, one way or another, deposited in your "skills bank," but it is done
much more efficiently if you stop for a minute and try to realize the
reasons behind each of the many creative choices you make when working.
Most sites are shaped by the two interacting forces: the designer
and the customer/owner of the site. In the real world, they often
have different sets of priorities, different and even conflicting
visions of the future site, and quite different level of familiarity in
the areas of content and design. Of course the customer's
view has a priority, and no designer will succeed without the ability
to elegantly adapt his ideas to the customer's requests. But the
"division line" between the realms of the designer and owner/maintainer
and the traces of their struggle are in many cases still noticeable.
The most notable exception to the above rule are the home sites of
Web designers themselves. This makes the case of my design studio
site especially interesting for our purposes: here, the struggle was
between the different sides of my ego rather than between myself and the
customer, and I know first hand what was involved at each stage of the
project. So, you're welcome to check out what I have
learned in this project, which is probably the second best method for
you to learn something - after doing it yourself!
As most other design case studies in my Lab, the article starts with
examining the site's logo. Then we'll
recollect some bits of the theory of colors to understand the color choices I've made for the logo and other
elements. The site's front page gives me an
opportunity to discuss some issues of a Web site's style and
attitude towards its visitors. The last section focuses
on navigation features of the site and touches upon the choice of tools
for Web graphics. |