Synopses & Reviews
This essential guide for Web site designers offers clear, concise advice on creating well-designed and effective Web sites and pages. Focusing on the interface and graphic design principles that underlie the best Web site design, the book provides anyone involved with Web site designin corporations, government, nonprofit organizations, and academic institutionswith expert guidance on issues ranging from planning and organizing goals to design strategies for a site to the elements of individual page design.
Shifting away from the emphasis of many authors on HyperText Markup Language (HTML) and glitzy, gimmicky graphics, Patrick J. Lynch and Sarah Horton discuss classic principles of design, how these principles apply to Web design, and the issues and constraints of designing complex, multilayered sites. They address the practical concerns of bending and adapting HTML to the purposes of graphic page design.
This book grew out of the widely used and highly praised Web site on site design created by the Center for Advanced Instructional Media at Yale University (info.med.yale.ed/caim/manual/). At this site, readers will continue to find updated color illustrations and examples to complement and demonstrate points made in the book, as well as useful and current online references.
Review
"At last, a book on the design of web sites with the viewer in mind. Non-technical, yet informative and lively: it delights as it informs." Donald A. Norman, author of The Design of Everyday Things and The Invisible Computer
Review
"A style guide for the interface with real long-run value, showing us deep principles of design rather than simply fashion and technology." Edward R. Tufte, Yale University