Friday, November 26, 2010

30 Examples of Brilliant Website Design for your inspiration

Web design inspiration can help you stay up to date on current trends, as well as seeing how to structure designs, control color palettes, work with usability, and understand the overall design process.  It’s important to continually check out other inspirational designs to see how you can apply new concepts to your own designs and continue to evolve as a designer.
Here you’ll find some fresh and new inspirational ideas for web designs, with a showcase of inspirational designs from some of the top designers around the globe.
Enjoy!


BeatRiot by AndrasoloArts

COD: Black Ops by tropfich

Sevenedge by dsdesign

My Portfolio by MrZielsko


Biotechnology by hinok

Spotify by alivepixel

Rapcore by SlaYerPk

Szybki by carl913

ADDA by luqa

Sport Layout by ECP-Pro


AppleMag by miko434

Zaraguza by mat3jko

Domy y Drewna by webdesigner1921

GPS Solutions by Sogaso

Mancora Surf Camp by Sogaso

Awesem by OrmanClark


Caper Shop by lukearoo

wygrajmcz.pl by brainchilds

experimental by tehacesequence

INtrace by Mr.Zielsko

I Love Theme by detrans

Oliveza by sogaso


Ephex by z-design

Mondef by Frostenblade

Bohio Studio by EAMejia

Dovolensky by fuxxo

DaNing by HKGood

Pilots by CreativeDesignsPL


Helinka by sogaso

Thursday, November 25, 2010

10 tips for a designing a logo

Designing logos is just like any other type of design work, to be professional you’ll need to pay attention to details. Even a great idea can be ruined by not thinking about simple things, the following tips will help you to keep your concepts safe.
  1. Work with vectors
    This probably sounds obvious to most designers out there, but it isn’t to everybody so I repeat it as often as I can to avoid receiving those damn jpeg logos. Vector formats are the ones that will allow the most variations for your logo.
  2. Don’t use more than 2 fonts
    There is many nice fonts out there and we would all love to use as many as we can. Unfortunately using too many fonts will most of the time result in a loss of coherence. Using two different fonts can be good to create a contrast, catching the eye.
  3. Keep it readable
    If people can’t read your logo, it’s useless to have one. This sounds like dumb advice again, but it’s easy to get caught in creating letters or distorting a font until it becomes unreadable. Always stay aware of that when working on your logo.
  4. Test sizes
    Your logo should resize well at any size, whether it’s huge on a truck or tiny on a badge.
  5. Adapt it for dark backgrounds
    So you’ve got a wonderful looking dark logo, but now your client want to get it on his black car. It’s usually not too hard to adapt it, but you’ll look more professional if you already got that case figured out.
  6. Make sure it works well in black and white
    I have a very simple technique for that: I work every logo in black and white before adding any colour. This way choices are made judging by the shapes and you are not distracted by anything else. It makes it much easier to know that your logo will work well in shades of grey afterwards.
  7. Don’t include photos in your logo
    Well… this one goes along with the first tip. First, photos are not vectors. Photos also don’t scale, have no branding value and are hard to adapt for any use.
  8. Look at it upside-down
    This is a tip I got from my teachers in graphic design school, looking at your logo (or any printed design really) will get the meaning out of the way and give you a new look at the design’s balance and white spaces. Try it!
  9. Don’t follow trends
    It’s often hard to escape trends, especially if you’re passionated and love to look at inspiring logos on design sites. Your logo has to work on the long run, so try to avoid the web 1.0 swoosh or the web 2.0 reflection.
  10. Get specific feedback
    Asking people’s opinion is worthless if you don’t know what informations you want to get, so when getting feedback, try asking specific questions (eg. does your logo expresses the industry of the company?).
To take your logo design skills one step further, you should check out these great sites:

40+ Beautiful Fish Inspired Logos

In this article you will find a collection of 40+ Beautiful Fish Inspired Logos. I hope these logo designs will inspire you for your next project.


Flook - Fishing Club
Flook - Fishing Club
fishcolor
Fishcolor
Travel Well
Travel Well
Origamia
Origamia
Sushi Ninja
Sushi Ninja
pearanah
Pearanah
Josh and Jamie Fishing
Josh and Jamie Fishing
Small Orange Fish
Small Orange Fish
Tonys/SeaFood
Tony's SeaFood

Corrib
Corrib
Killerss
Killerss
8 Fish
8 Fish
fishmail
fishmail
Babelfish Legal
Babelfish Legal
FishEye Network
FishEye Network
iPhone App Logo
iPhone App Logo
Noesa Quality Seafood
Noesa Quality Seafood
Tiger Fish
Tiger Fish

sushi
Sushi
SecondFish
SecondFish
Fortuna
Fortuna
Firefish
Firefish
Fish
Fish
CodeFish
CodeFish
Poseidon Jobs
Poseidon Jobs
Go Fish
Go Fish
Plastic Whale
Plastic Whale

Fishka.by
Fishka.by
fishline2
fishline2
The Piranha Room
The Piranha Room
Seafini
Seafini
Mary Fisher Design
Mary Fisher Design
yellowfish
Yellowfish
Ink Fish
Ink Fish
Gourmet
Gourmet
Two Fish
Two Fish

Fish Five
Fish Five
Kingfish
Kingfish
Ticklefish Design
Ticklefish Design
USA Reels
USA Reels
Fish Lounge
Fish Lounge
FreshFish
FreshFish
gofishy
Gofishy