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  • scissors
    March 13th, 2010adminUncategorized

    Chappelsons website screenshot Earlier this year, we were asked to design a new website for Chappelsons who are a local company that supply and install fitted kitchens, bedrooms and home studies. The existing website was quite old and we jumped at the chance to redesign it based on the company’s newer logo.

    As part of this project, we wanted to highlight several examples of different styles of kitchens, bedrooms and home studies that Chappelsons can provide. Rather than a list of images in a gallery, which can take up a lot of page space, we chose to use a JavaScript content slider called Easy Slider [which I blogged about here]. This is an attractive but compact way of displaying page content. This type of script using jQuery as its foundation has the added advantage that the slider content is still visible in the page for search engines to index. I think it works quite well.

  • scissors
    March 13th, 2010adminJavascript

    jQuery: Novice to Ninja I am reading a new jQuery book from Sitepoint at the moment. It’s called jQuery: Novice to Ninja and it promises to take you from beginner to expert. If you have copied and pasted jQuery code up to now without thinking or knowing how it works, this book could be for you! The book covers a whole range of examples so it’s also very good for intermediates. I have used some of the code from the first chapters already!

    The book weighs in at just over 400 pages and is divided into nine chapters that start with the basics of jQuery, and its use for selecting, decorating and enhancing your HTML, and moving on to chapters about, for example, animations, images and slideshows, menus, tabs, and tooltips, and Ajax. The book also includes a final chapter on creating a jQuery plugin and advanced methods for extending jQuery.

    I’ll post a more in depth review when I have read through the whole book.

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  • scissors
    March 11th, 2010adminJavascript

    Over the last week or so I have come across several websites that allow users to navigate using the left and right arrow keys. I think this is an interesting approach and I really like this method of navigating a website. Perhaps it’s just me but I like using keyboard shortcuts (because they seem to allow me to do things faster) …. so it’s interesting to see websites using the left and right keys in this way. Here are the website examples I have spotted that use this method.

    • Crush + Lovely. This is a fantastic design and the left and right keys enable you to scroll between the various content sections. Try it and see!
    • Pictory is a photo story website and it uses left and right keyboard navigation in a similar way.
    • Thinking for a Living uses left and right keys for horizontal scrolling between sections/pages.
    • OnSugar uses a left-right arrow key method to navigate between images in a gallery.

    There is an adding keyboard navigation tutorial at jQuery for Designers which explains how a similar effect is achieved with an image slider. The jQuery Tools website has Scrollable which enables a content slider to be navigated with left-right keys.

    There may be disadvantages to this method but I’m keen to find out more about it so if you know of other websites that use this approach, let me know.

  • scissors
    March 2nd, 2010adminEcommerce

    La La Card Company website screenshot

    Here’s a little plug for an ecommerce website that we launched recently. The La La Card Company sells decoupage card kits, single card kits and other card-making items for download.

    The design was created from Photoshop images provided by the client and we used SugarSync to share a folder between us. SugarSync is a back-up and synchonisation tool but you can also use it to share folders with someone else. It worked really well.

    For this project, we built a demo product listing page on a testing server so that the client could see how the product might be displayed. This work was paid for by the client but it served to highlight a number of issues that were addressed in the website itself. I will probably do this with other clients if there are questions that cannot be answered before an ecommerce project starts.

    Now that the The La La Card Company has been launched, we may not be doing as much work with it but I think it’s important to say that an ecommerce website (or any website for that matter) is never actually finished. There are always items that can be added or pages to be tweaked and the shop software can be updated. In fact, most websites would benefit from a continual programme of improvements but often this is not done. If you are a small business with a website that has been static (ahem) for a while, I would urge you to consider allocating someone from your company to update the website or get someone on board to carry out a maintenance programme even if it’s only for an hour or two every month. After all, you wouldn’t ignore other parts of your business would you?

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