Alright, I know it’s been 8 months that I started in Canwest. The new HGTV.ca suppose to be launched and still not happening? why? Technical issues. We are working on changing the entire system backend including the CMS and the entire search system.
Well, it takes a long time to do those changes! So when is it approx. will launch now? Who knows, hopefully in the beginning of next year?
HGTV.ca team can’t seem to bare the fact that the site has been outdated for over 7 or 8 years now. They felt that the site needs a little ‘refresh’.
The ‘mini’ refresh was to update the look without changing the structure of the site. All I did is update the color palette. This quick update only took me less than one day to design, and another day to cut out small graphics and background images for production guys to implement. Small changes but big impact.
HGTV.ca homepage 2008 Before the refresh
HGTV.ca homepage After
HGTV.ca microsite redesign:
Well, we can’t revamp the whole site yet but we can revamp those microsites to be up to the trend.
I have revamped several micro sites for HGTV.ca. I noticed all the microsites from the past were not built on the same structure. They have different image sizes and different page layout. It really adds more work load to the production team everytime they get a request to build a new microsite!!
Income Property, Property Virgins, Home to Flip and The Property Shop are the newest large background microsites that HGTV.ca will have this fall.
I unified the site template so production team only need to do their CSS stylesheet once, and all they have to do was to change the path of the imagery and the color palette. Streamlined the process which makes everyone’s life easier.
Recently I have gotten a lot of inquiries about designing for logo/brochure/print material.
Unfortunately I am not confident enough to take on those projects. Why? I am a web designer not a graphic designer.
People tend to think graphic designer can do web and web designer can do print. It is a mistake and it will cost you a fortune if you try to mix both.
Graphic designer and web designer came from the same foundation. We all have to learn about composition, typography, color and layout. At the end, we make the product look functional and pretty.
However, with graphic designer, their specialty is with paper and print material. While web designer, we manipulate pixels within the browser space.
Now why can’t graphic designer do web?
Because most graphic designer lack of the web programming knowledge. Web is content centric and it changes all the time. A web page size could shrink and expand depends on the size of the content. A web programmer usually takes a web designer’s design and turn it into a functional website. A graphic designer will design a web site as if it’s on a paper that provides a fixed width and height to work with. A web designer will understand the technology constrain and design around the programming.
A website usually gets updated frequently, a good web designer will make it easy to update for future date. A graphic designer lacks the vision to look further than current date.
Now why can’t web designer do print?
Because most web designer lacks the understanding of print material capacity. Graphic designer understand the texture, size and the surface material of a print material, so they design the best out of the provided material. Web designer won’t be able to provide the best result with print compare to a graphic designer.
Graphic designer are also the ones who designs logo and stationary. They understand the scale of a branding from small to large and from black/white to color. Web designer usually gets the logo and stationary from graphic designer and then transform the identity into a web space.
Now you know why I don’t do print? Because I might not be able to provide you a best result for your buck, hiring a professional graphic designer to do your print will worth a lot more for your money!
It’s been nearly one month that I started at Canwest. In the first two weeks, I had done tons of reading of on current HGTV.ca documentation and assessment for the new one.
My first major task was to redesign HGTV.ca. I had a great meeting with all the content people to find out what they want to see on the new site.
I also had another meeting with our technology director to go through our existing technology that we had used on our properties.
There’s few things I learned about designing corporate site especially the ones on CMS system.
1. Be Flexible with layout
Modular design has definitely become a trend in recent years. Why? because designer don’t get to put the content on the website, but editors or content coordinators do. As designer, we have to provide a easy solution for editors to arrange the content however and whatever they want on the website.
Modular design should allow content editors to remove or add content pieces without asking designer to do further customization.
Designer will be the one who is determine the look and feel of the content ‘container’. However, we should NOT design around specific content. It’s best to avoid using image for a content title. Let it be dynamic so it can be easily changed.
It is important to design a layout that can fit maximum and minimum contents and make the content easy to relocate.
2. Creating opportunities for monetization
Today, major corporate website is all about making money off traffics. Marketing will try to sell any potential advertising placement on the site.
It is important to keep in mind that we need to leave space for a sponsor logo or any custom sponsored header.
I also love beautiful backgrounds but I also have to design it in a way that it can be changed from time to time. Advertiser loves buying your website’s entire background. So make it easy to change!
3. Don’t re-invent the wheel
I guess being a designer is that we tend to customize our design and make it unique. However, design is easy, but when you hand it over to developers, they will probably want to stab you while you are sleeping because you are causing them losing their sleeps because they had to build it from scratch. So if your developers had developed a widget, but it might not be 100% the way you wanted, seriously, for the time being, just take it and skin the widget.
4. Keep the cropped image on the same ratio
If there’s CMS system behind a corporate site, the ideal way is to upload a large resolution photo once without further cropping. The CMS will do the work cropping down for you. The trick is to keep all the cropping ratio the same.
Beautiful photos are the bread and butter of HGTV. However, the image comes in with vertical and horizontal display. It needs to find a common cropping size that will keep the essence of the photo. I personally find the ratio of width 6: height 5 is the best when displaying thumbnails.
Some people prefer to use square ratio but I think it lacks of contrast.
5. Keep the design consistent, and keep it simple
With corporate website, the common problem we found that there’s too many design elements and too many information all at once. User won’t know where to read or what to read.
The design should support the content but not the other way around.
It is important to keep the same design treatment through out the website. The includes usage of color, border, divider, font family, font size, content header styling, thumbnail size, navigation styling..etc.
6. Finally…
Reading and keep up with current design trend. I often visit patterntap.com for design pattern inspiration. This is a web2.0 era, make the user engaging your site instead of limiting it.
Today I dropped off the job offer from Canwest Broadcasting. This is probably one of my happiest moment in my life right now. Two years ago, I had the same moment but everything fell apart after 6 months.
In graphic design, we learn to layout using a certain grid system, so all the element on the page are align properly and provides a better visual flow. This goes the same to web design. Screen might not be a print magazine but it still applies the basic grid system.
One of my coworker sent me a link to ‘960 Grid System‘ site. This is probably one of the best link that I have came across so far.
960 Grid system site provides you templates to download for your Photoshop, Illustrator, Indesign,Inscape, Omnigraffle, Visio, fireworks, and Expression Design.
I personally use Photoshop to mock up my websites. This grid template is very handy because all the guide lines are lined up for you already. This makes my design to be easier because I have something that I can reference to in terms of alignment. If you have never try to design with a grid, well, I guess it’s about time for you to start. 960.gs !
This is often the compliment I got from my manager and the people I work with. They are referring that I always turn over the work so quickly that I work just as fast as a machine.
Couple weeks ago, my hubby got laid off at work. It was two days before we took a 3 week trip to Vietnam and Cambodia. Not sure if they purposely timed it or it’s just coincidence?
Now I am the only person in the household working now. Alex had decided to complete his goal to finish his forever part time school to full time school at Ryerson for his information technology management degree.
Financially, I was abit concerned. It’s not like we don’t have money saved up, in fact, we have been saving since the recession hits, and we had a goal to take at least one year off to do full time travel sometimes down the road.
I tried to explain to him that perhaps he can take some time to start a blog now or to ‘make’ some widget or application to get some passive income. Passive income is a great way generating revenue without actually working full time on it everyday!
For example, a flash developer can always submit their flash files or components to Active Den for people to download. The more people downloading the more money you make! That goes the same to photographer who submit their work to istockphoto or any stock photography sites!
There are also a lot of bloggers out there just living off the online ad revenue and ebook sales. I explained to him there’s a reason why you can’t always depend on the company you work for! Cuz shit happens all the time, who knows if you have a job the next day?
In fact, my goal for us is to have a location independent career. I want to build enough portfolio and connections to make sure I can have projects on the go in the future. I want to be a rockstar designer who works internationally. I literally hate being trapped inside the corporate box.
But for now on, I’ll get to make the money and he cleans the house!
For years designing websites, I often wonder what type face or type size are most suitable for readers. Right now most of the design I did, I tried to keep it simple and flexible. Therefore I play safe with only working with system fonts.
Often print designer did not understand the differences between print and web typography. Typography in web needs a consistency of sizes so that people can connect to the content. Often as web designer, part of our job was to create a “style guide”. It’s a guide that states the font usage and sizing for headers, titles, body text, captions..etc.
In corporate design, we can’t really be ‘too’ creative with the font choices. Instead, we try to make the content to be more legible for reading, we also have to make sure the content flows so users won’t miss out any important content that we want to send across.
I just came across this awesome article from Smashing Magazine, it did a bunch of survey of average font sizes an choices for all web typography practices.
As I am working my way on thestar.com’s new redesign. We encountered one major issue with the new advertising sizes that are aligned with Online Publishers Association.
Push down – 970 pixel x 418 pixel
XXL box – 468 pixel x 648 pixel
Fixed Panel – 336 pixel x 860 pixel
We contracted out our new design to an outside company. Great, the new design already taken place, so how are we gonna implement the new design without disturbing the existing template?
Take a look of the new design layout wireframe.
new thestar.com layout
The new design will be a 3 column layout. We will always have a leaderboard and a big box on the page. The content will follow by a major headline story and then a list of story line up. Everything looks good except the new humongous ads sizes break all the layout rule.
Problem:The new ad sizes does not fit with the new design! As always that advertiser wants their ad above-the-fold to get exposure. Our design was created and built before those new ad sizes. And of course the outside company is not gonna go back to the layout mode unless we slap them with more cash.
Solution:Tweak the layout in the most minimal way and keep everything on the page identical. In order to cut down the developer’s work, I had to take the existing layout and tweak the most minimal way so that we won’t need to touch the majority of the existing CSS stylesheet.
Push down advertising is the easiest to mock up because all you need is to push down all the content below navigation. Then again, it’s so huge that you can’t ignore.
XXL Ad gives me a headache. Ideally, we want to keep our 3 column layout, but this nasty size literally takes up half of the website width!!! So I had to reorganize the headline story content and have it share space with the XXL ad in it’s own box and push everything down.
XXL Box Ad (468 pixel x 648 pixel)
Finally, the fixed panel. The width of fixed panel is 336pixel. It is literally 36 pixel wider than our right rail, which has our big box ad and all the related contents. And with 860pixel in height, there’s no way the headline story abstract can show that much copy to accommodate the height. Therefore I had to bring some story line up and shrink the width in order to accommodate the odd width size.
Fixed Panel Ad 336 pixel x 860 pixel
So why those large ad? I guess the advertisers are now aware the demand for premium inventory, and not just blinking skyscraper anymore.
Alright, when Rogers started their couch comparision with Bell’s home phone service. I really think the marketing campaign is just BORING.
Rogers Homephone Challenge Couch Comparison
Both companies are money-gauging company so it’s just disgusting for me to even want to look at the ad. However, what it gets interesting is when company is attacking eachother using the same marketing approach.
Bell's couch comparison
This is Bell’s couch comparison Ad that is advertised on today’s Metronews paper. It took the whole spread. It says “You think I am expensive for my homephone service? I have more stuff to offer for the digital TV!”
While those two are fighting for each other. I saw this Ad from Telehop that took the same couch idea and then added their own. It simply says “I am the cheapest for the best offer, sucka!”