DrupalCon Austin 2014: THINKING INSIDE THE BOX INSIDE THE BOX INSIDE THE BOX
Speakers: codingdesigner
Great design, like jazz, needs both harmony and discord skillfully executed in just the right places. On the web, many of our projects are playing sour notes. Let's want to get in tune.
Even in the age or Responsive Web Design, many sites are being designed from the outside in. Whether the page is defined in Photoshop or, let's hope, in-browser, many design projects slide out of tune when they get to the second or third page. Components are inconsistent, page and layout dimensions vary, font sizes shift. These details add up. Living style guides have been proposed to address this problem, the trouble is they're often extracted from the finished project.
Let's design the style guide first. Start from inside out with the most common aspects of a design language. Instead of envisioning individual pages, work to create a cohesive family of components and layouts that can be assembled into any page. By leveraging a tool called Style Prototypes, components, layouts, and even working pages can be created and designed. It's the new blank paper.
This session will focus on the principles and benefits of this approach and use real-world examples from client work and personal projects. There will be some technical examples that will range from intermediate to advanced Sass and Responsive Web Design. This will include Sass partials, extends, mixins, and Compass extensions like Breakpoint and Singularity Grid System.
Great design, like jazz, needs both harmony and discord skillfully executed in just the right places. On the web, many of our projects are playing sour notes. Let's want to get in tune.
Even in the age or Responsive Web Design, many sites are being designed from the outside in. Whether the page is defined in Photoshop or, let's hope, in-browser, many design projects slide out of tune when they get to the second or third page. Components are inconsistent, page and layout dimensions vary, font sizes shift. These details add up. Living style guides have been proposed to address this problem, the trouble is they're often extracted from the finished project.
Let's design the style guide first. Start from inside out with the most common aspects of a design language. Instead of envisioning individual pages, work to create a cohesive family of components and layouts that can be assembled into any page. By leveraging a tool called Style Prototypes, components, layouts, and even working pages can be created and designed. It's the new blank paper.
This session will focus on the principles and benefits of this approach and use real-world examples from client work and personal projects. There will be some technical examples that will range from intermediate to advanced Sass and Responsive Web Design. This will include Sass partials, extends, mixins, and Compass extensions like Breakpoint and Singularity Grid System.