Archive for the 'web design' Category

Upcoming Projects & Work…

Well, as I get ready to head back home in the next few days hopefully, I’ve been looking over some things that will need to be done and trying to prioritize what I have left to do on a few projects, and how to tackle those when I get back to get back in the routine.

First, the most important item I have on the table is the completion of the Drupal project Poodle Breeder Source. It’s a great site, and almost ready to go, I just need to finalize the ecommerce installation again, and work on some of the copy for generic pages, along with touching up the admin panel that advertising/posting users will have the ability to access for usability purposes.

Second, I need to upgrade this site to the latest version of wordpress… should be easy money there.

Third, I need to complete the copy and such for the Himerus Inc. The layout is done, and except for a few issues in IE7 with the jQuery scrollbars,  it really just needs the appropriate information incorporated into the pages that have been created so far. This will be the first implementation of my own custom CMS that will greatly speed up putting out quality, easy to manage sites.

Fourth, It’ll be time to rework the Himpressive theme, and get that set up to work with Wordpress 2.3 and have it installed on the site. I’m really excited about that one, the way it’s going to be set up, It could definitely be a popular theme that gets used quite a bit, and will be my first release of a fully functional Wordpress theme. Included with that will be a few plugins that help some of the functionality that will be implied on the theme. There will be a very slick jQuery calendar that should be eaten up by the community even without using the theme.

So, putting it lightly, I have a lot of work to accomplish, and want to be able to get most of this lined out as quickly as possible once I get back home. Once I get in the swing of these projects, I will probably be able to start posting up some jQuery tutorials and different modifications to Drupal and Wordpress that I can’t live without.

Look for more to come soon!!

 

Busy with jQuery

I’ve been really busy the last few weeks getting my head fully around jQuery, and all the magical things it can do.  I will hope to start writing a little more often, and start into some nice jQuery tutorials for the beginning jQuery user.

I’m currently working on 1 personal project that will use jQuery 100% on front-end page/content loading, and also am putting together a custom CMS where the backend is 100% jQuery functionality and loading, so I’ll have a fair amount of experience after these two are done or even just a little further along.

 

Theme Update: Announcing Himpressive

After quite a bit of work on my idea for design layout and concept, I’ve got most of the ideas in my head that I want to incorporate into what I “think” will be a great Wordpress theme. It will be known henceforth as: Himpressive.

Continue reading ‘Theme Update: Announcing Himpressive’

 

Browser Buster - Alpha Layer Tranparency…

When I first began this project to create my blog, I didn’t have a real direction to know if there was any particular feature/design challenges that I was hoping to learn, or implement. It became clear after just a couple of hours in Photoshop that I had a layout that could potentially get some nice reviews… but the longer I played with the layout, the more transparent things became…

I’ve used alpha layer transparency for some time now, especially with content images, or icons so that regardless of style changes, the background would show through appropriately, and not have a jagged white edge like the GIF images of the past. So this had become a large part of my implementations on many sites, however, I had yet to really test out the alpha layer transparency in the PNG images, and see how far I could push the envelope with it.So after a few hours of putting the layout together, it was clear to me that everything on the site was going to reflect some sort of transparency. This really began with the background images that were from istockphoto. I spent a little time customizing them, and was very satisfied, and didn’t want to hide a majority of it from users on a normal resolution like 1024×768.In my original Photoshop file, there were still some non-transparent items, but I planned on implementing those sections during the skinning process on Wordpress.

After getting the main body background skinned, the content container, and the menu bar, it had already become apparent that there were going to be issues with the browsers that I’m not used to dealing with. I have been working for the last 2 years very diligently to correct bad coding habits, concentrate on accessible code, and perfecting my layouts cross-browser. Being a programmer, design and proper html/css coding was never my main focus until I felt I had plateaued in my PHP abilities, and decided to concentrate on the design aspects of the projects I worked on. This was always a challenge, and a learning experience to say the least… but I had never had a site actually pushed the limits of a browsers capability to render the content.

To cut to the meat of this, of the current 3 browsers I will test with (Safari for Windows, Firefox, and IE7) on my projects, in this situation, Firefox performs the very worst, with Safari being the browser champ excluding a oddity with jQuery that I have yet to investigate further. The fact that Firefox has the worst rendering of the alpha layer blows my mind, simply for the fact, it was the first browser that got me excited about that feature, and at the time, I hated that it didn’t work in IE6, and was so on the Firefox bandwagon that it was disgusting.

The Browser Buster Results:

Firefox:Firefox has actually had the most glaring problem of all the browsers when handling the alpha layer, despite the fact, it was the first browser that I began using the feature for, and cursed Microsoft for not properly handling it at the time.When in Firefox, the layout is perfect, however, if you grab your vertical scrollbar, and quickly scroll up and down on any of the pages, you will see sections of the page/site that aren’t moving at the same speed as the other elements on page, so the layout becomes quite choppy when scrolling. Using the wheel on your mouse will also duplicate this problem. This seems like a horrible rendering of the alpha layer when spread across any sizable layout piece.


Internet Explorer 7:Surprisingly enough, Internet Explorer handles both the layout and alpha layer transparency very well. If I were an IE user, I would have been very satisfied with the results developing right in IE7.



Safari 3 Beta:Safari, which I’ve only had installed on my Vista system for about a month now, turns out the be the be all, end all rendering of the front end of this site. The smooth fonts in Safari are enough alone to make the switch, but the scrolling of the alpha layer that is seen in Firefox is not noticed here at all, and it seems the alpha layers that are stacking are all held in place with each other when scrolling, never revealing any choppy scrolling.This seemed funnies to me, since it was my understanding that Firefox and Safari both used the same engine or something like that.



In the odd case someone is using IE6 to view this site, it will not work. If you are still using IE6, please join the 21st century, and download the free IE update to IE7, or download one of the free browsers like Firefox or Safari that will greatly enhance your browsing experience. Many design firms are throwing away compatibility with IE6 in order that they may move their designs to more advanced layouts & techniques that are NOT handled by IE6 worth a flipping damn…

 

Upcoming project: Moving corporate site to Drupal.

I only recently built the current version of my web development company, well if you’d call recent about 6 months ago, so It’s well past time that I gave it an upgrade. I’ve found that I’m still quite pleased with the overall idea of the design and layout, however, the site was created as about 90% static content when it was put up. At the time, I had no real options I considered for a CMS, and had not yet ran across the delightfully written code of the Drupal open source package.

himerusinc.com home layouthimerusinc.com home layouthimerusinc.com home layout
Continue reading ‘Upcoming project: Moving corporate site to Drupal.’

 

Design for Blog, and layout almost there…

first layout concept

Well, I only spent about a solid 6 or 8 hours on this all weekend, but made great progress from conception to design, to customization in Wordpress.

I’ve got some stuff to work on with the sidebar layout and theming, and the comment sections, along with fixing the upper nav that I broke here at some point. Finishing up the footer, and a few other small maintenance tasks that should be all easy enough over the course of this week.

Here’s a shot of what I had worked out in Photoshop…

Overall, I’m pretty happy with the layout, and think it’ll work great for this blog!

 

CS3 Loses ImageReady & I Install CS2 Again…

Well, now that I’ve had a day to play around customizing wordpress a little, I’ve been able to get the majority of the design implemented. I would have been done had it not been for my lil dance with the Adobe CS3 package, and my splitting headache trying to understand how such an advanced product fell so short for me in a very simple respect.

Last night and today were also my first opportunities to really play with the new Photoshop CS3, and I came across a terrible omission that has simply got me all sorts of pissed. The fact that ImageReady is no longer in the product could have been okay, especially for the fact that I only ever used IR to divide my PS layouts into nice slices. Something that always made me wonder why it wasn’t build into PS by default. I understand that there are some really good slicing features with Fireworks, but I have rarely to ever used FW in my daily web design over the past years. All I’ve ever worried about was Photoshop, and Imageready using it’s quick slice & dice, and poop it out for the web, so now I’m left with my pants down trying to figure out how to do what was a very SIMPLE process in Photoshop CS2, and is now proving complicated.

Poop on you, Adobe… I’m gonna install CS2 again… just for that ONE DUMB feature…

 

Little about me

I am a 29 year old web developer. I have been coding PHP for about 10 years, and have used MySQL extensively with PHP. I have spent the last couple of years really trying to move past the coder genre, and extend my abilities further and incorporate more advanced designs. In the last year, I have also worked diligently at making proper XHTML/CSS sites a reality on every project I do.

My current motto: “I will stab you if you write a layout with a table…