Posts tagged web design

Easy Slider – Powerful and Customizable jQuery Slider Plugin

Recently, I was working on completing my portfolio website. I wanted a slick and impressive way to display my past portfolio work, and I found this little gem known as Easy Slider while surfing the internet.

Easy Slider saved my life. It’s a jQuery image slider that is highly customizable. I recommend it for anyone who needs to create an image gallery or wants to add an interactive element to their website! It was super easy to put up, even for a JavaScript dummy like me. Check out the newer version for added features.
Easy Slider 1.5 – The Easiest jQuery Plugin For Sliding Images and Content
Easy Slider 1.7 – Numeric Navigation jQuery Slider

Check out how I implemented Easy Slider on my portfolio website! :)

If you liked this post, you might also like…
Top 10 Web Design Resources Every Designer Should Know About
Wana Learn jQuery?
Wordpress?

Super Clean and Easy Writing in the Sand Photoshop Tutorial

After searching fruitlessly for a good Photoshop tutorial on creating a “writing in the sand” effect, I ended up making up my own way – and now I’ll share it with all of you! :) It creates a very clean and smooth effect and is super easy and fast to complete.

Final Writing in the Sand preview

The first step is to find an appropriate font that will look like someone has written in the sand with their finger. For the tutorial, I chose to use Handwriting – Dakota since I like the rough quality to it.

After you’ve found a suitable font, create a new canvas in Photoshop. You can also use an existing one if you already have a design started.

Since there can be no writing in the sand without the sand, let’s create a sand background for behind our text. Fill your canvas with an appropriate sandy colour – I am using #f0ebdf. Now go to the top menubar and go to Filter – Noise – Add Noise… Check the Monochromatic box and set it to Uniform Distribution. You can fiddle with the Amount, but remember, you want it to look like sand, not a bunch of noise! I used 1.75% and was quite happy with the subtle texture. Click OK.

Add Noise

The great thing about this method is it will create a perfect tiling background – you don’t have to worry about seams showing up if you use it as a repeating page background for your web design! :) Now we need to add our text. You’ll want to make it a dark brown colour so that it can be read easily against your sand background – I am using #a0894e.

Add text

Next, we’re going to use some Blending Options on our text layer to create the illusion of a build-up of sand around our text, and to give our text some depth. In your menubar, go to Layer – Layer Style – Blending Options. To create the sand build-up, let’s add a stroke. The size of the stroke will depend on the size of your text – it should be in proportion to look realistic. Since I have rather large text, I am going to make my stroke 4 pixels. The position should be on the Outside, and change the blend mode to Overlay. Up the Opacity to 100% and change the colour to black (#000000).

Add stroke

If you click OK, your text should now look something like this:

Stroke Preview

Now, to create some depth, let’s add Bevel and Embossing. We’re going to give our text an Inner Bevel. I changed the depth to 50% and made the size 4 pixels; you can experiment with these values to get your desired effect. The important part is to change the lighting so that the text looks like it is ingrained into the canvas rather than sticking out of it. I changed the Shading Angle to -120 degrees and changed the Altitude to 30 degrees. Change both the Highlight and Shadow Mode to Overlay and lower both Opacity values to 50%. The Highlight colour should be white and the Shadow black. Click OK.

Add Bevel and Emboss

We’re almost done! Your text should now look like it is etched in the sand:

Bevel and Emboss Preview

You can stop at this step if you prefer, but I’m going to add the final touch by giving our text a bit more texture. Make sure your text layer is still selected, and again go to your menubar and go to Filter – Noise – Add Noise… Use the same settings as before, but up the Amount a bit: I made mine 3%. Click OK and now you’re done!

Add Noise to Text

The final product should look something like this:

Final Writing in the Sand preview

Easy right? :) I hope you enjoyed my little tutorial. Comment on this post if you have any issues getting things to work, or if you would like to suggest improvements!

If you liked this post, you might also like…

Pillowed Text Photoshop Tutorial

How to Create a Stylish Pair of Headphones

Create Cool iPhone Icons

Top 10 Web Design Resources Every Designer Should Know About

Where would web designers be without the invaluable resources provided on the web for us? Design inspiration, stock photos, tutorials, fonts, freebies, brushes, textures … the list goes on. Take advantage of the resources and expertise other web designers offer for free! Here are 10 of my absolute favourites, in no particular order:

Design Meltdown (design inspiration)

Browse thousands of cataloged sites to get inspiration for your own web designs – invaluable for finding inspiration on specific design elements, styles, themes, or colours.

Scrnshots (design inspiration)

Browse screenshots of inspirational web design uploaded by other users or upload your own favourite designs. Very useful for finding inspiration about specific elements since you browse by tags and keywords.

Designer’s Toolbox (design resources)

Provides many miscellaneous design and print resources, including PSDs of HTML form and browser elements for realistic design mock-ups.

Stock Xchng (stock photos)

One of the best free stock photo sites; Stock Exchange provides thousands of super high-quality stock photos for FREE for both personal and commercial use.

Smashing Magazine (interactive design blog)

The most well-known web design blog out there, Smashing Magazine provides TONS of information, resources, tutorials, and tips from industry professionals. Try to soak up as much of their expertise as you possibly can.

DaFont (free fonts)

Browse their huge selection of free fonts to spice up your design. They make it easy to find a specific type of font since you can browse by theme, name, or search for keywords!

Blind Text Generator (dummy text)

Generates highly-customizable dummy text (lorem ipsum) for use in the text areas of your design.

Type Tester (css font comparison)

Preview different web-safe fonts to see what they will look like on the screen and customize the different CSS font options.

Color Scheme Designer (colour palettes)

Highly-customize colour palette generator which allows you to also preview what the colour scheme could look like on a web page.

Design Resources Search Engine (design search engine)

This search engine has endless usefulness – it allows you to do a Google search but only on the selected design-related websites. Great for finding tutorials, resources, and blogs.

What are YOUR favourite web design resources? Comment and let us know! :)

If you liked this post, you might also like…

Top 10 Best Cheap Web Hosts

Firebug is Every Web Developer’s Friend

GIMP – The FREE Alternative to Photoshop

GIMP – The FREE Alternative to Photoshop

Gimp free alternative to PhotoshopLet’s face it: Photoshop is freakin’ EXPENSIVE. At a whopping $700 US for Photoshop CS4, you had better hope your parents decide to spoil you and buy it for you next Christmas. Unfortunately, the high price point makes it difficult for beginners and aspiring web designers to get into the business – you had better be darn sure web design is what you want to do before spending $700 on Photoshop. So what are the alternatives?

GIMP is the best Photoshop alternative out there and it’s completely free. It offers many of the same advanced features as Photoshop – for FREE. While, so far, nothing can replace Photoshop as an industry standard, GIMP is certainly a passable equivalent for beginners. 

CNET Download.com reviewed it and gave it 5/5 stars:

“One of the most powerful general-purpose image editors around, the upgrades make the GNU Image Manipulation Program eminently comparable to Photoshop. Older features include channels, layers and masks, filters and effects, tabbed palettes, editable text tools, perspective clone, improved printing, and color operations such as levels. New improvements include GEGL integration for 32-bit color support, dynamic brushes, and more options for the free select tool. It even has regex-based pattern matching for power users.”

So if you’re strapped for cash, give GIMP a go!