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Teach
Yourself Great Web Design
by Anne-Rae Vasquez
& Paul Chow
REVIEWS
Internet Books Editor's Recommended Book
The basics of Web design are easy to learn if you have
the right teachers--such as Anne-Rae Vasquez and
Paul Chow. And with so much bad design on the Web, knowing
what to do will automatically put you near the front of
the pack. This book takes you through everything from basic
design elements to planning a site to final design--just
seven days worth of lessons to teach you how to design Web
sites that sizzle. Included is a CD-ROM with all the book's
source code, examples, and great software tools.
DESCRIPTION
This
step-by-step, full-color tutorial is loaded with graphics,
tables, diagrams, and examples of what to do-and what not
to do-when designing Web pages. Users will master the fundamentals
of good page design-from typography fan layout to use of
color and graphics-and learn how to apply them to the Web.
In no time, they'll be creating eye-catching Web pages that
present information effectively and guide visitors through
their sites efficiently.
- Provides
Q&A sections, week-at-a-glance previews, and real-world
exercises to make learning easy-and fun
- CD-ROM
contains Internet Explorer 3.0, Microsoft ActiveX and
HTML development tools, ready-to-use templates, graphics,
scripts, Java applets, and ActiveX controls
SYNOPSIS
A
step-by-step tutorial in the fundamentals of good page design,
Teach Yourself Great Web Design in a Week covers typography,
layout, color, graphics--and how to apply them to the Web.
The CD explores all the examples and Web pages used in the
book, Internet Explorer 3.0, plus additional Web publishing
resources--graphics, media clips, Java applets, and scripts.
FROM
THE PUBLISHER
This
step-by-step, full-color tutorial is loaded with graphics,
tables, diagrams, and examples of what to do-and what not
to do-when designing Web pages. Users will master the fundamentals
of good page design-from typography fan layout to use of
color and graphics-and learn how to apply them to the Web.
In no time, they'll be creating eye-catching Web pages that
present information effectively and guide visitors through
their sites efficiently. - Provides Q&A sections, week-at-a-glance
previews, and real-world exercises to make learning easy-and
fun.
CD-ROM
contains Internet Explorer 3.0, Microsoft ActiveX and HTML
development tools, ready-to-use templates, graphics, scripts,
Java applets, and ActiveX controls
Read
Testimonial
Tips
and Samples taken from the book:
Teach
Yourself Great Web Design Online Samples
LINKS
Here
are some links about our book:
If
you are interested in buying our book, you can buy it on-line
at:
Amazon
books
NC
Buy "The Club" -
Teach yourself Great Web Design on $7.00 per day
Reviewed By: Delmer Wells
"... a valuable resource for anybody
thinking about putting up a web site."
"Teach Yourself Great Web Design in a Week" (henceforth
referred to as TYGWD) weighs in at 384 pages and comes with
a companion CD. Included on the CD are PC and Macintosh
freeware and shareware programs, graphics you can use as
you create your own web site, as well as sample web pages
and challenge exercises. The back cover of the book indicates
it is targeted toward new to casual users. I'm guessing
this means new to casual web designers, as some of the exercises
in the book - well, even installing the shareware programs
- falls beyond the skills of most new users I run across.
The price is $49.99 in the U.S., and $70.95 in Canada.
The authors of the book make it very clear that TYGWD is
not intended to be an HTML primer. Its focus is web site
design. The book provides instruction on how to make a site
look better, suggests things that designers can do to keep
people from clicking away from their site too soon, and
gives tips on what to do to keep them coming back. Readers
will be able to pick up an HTML tag here and there but shouldn't
expect to walk away from the book fluent in HTML.
The book is divided into seven sections - Day 1 through
Day 7 -- of two chapters each. Each chapter ends with a
"Challenge Yourself" exercise that is completed using information
drawn from the chapter. As one might expect, the exercises
become more challenging as the reader makes his way toward
the end of the book. An early activity asks the reader to
use a pencil and paper to make a sketch of her proposed
web site, whereas a later exercise has the reader creating
animated GIFs. Any software needed to complete the challenges
is included on the CD-ROM.
The book covers a lot of ground. Readers are given instruction
on how to make good use of fonts, how to use tables, when
to use frames, color selection, graphics use, adding sound,
etc. Readers are also given plenty of instruction on what
not to do - don't use too many graphics or graphics that
are too big; don't use too many fonts; don't use too many
frames; make wise use of color. How do you know what is
too much or too little - good or bad? The authors provide
guidelines and there are plenty of full-color examples of
good and bad web sites and design elements provided in the
book and on the CD.
"Teach Yourself Great Web Design in a Week" has a lot to
offer and will prove to be a valuable resource for anybody
thinking about putting up a web site. I think that $49.99
is a lot to ask for almost any book. The cost is easier
to justify in this case as the information presented in
the book isn't going to be outdated with the next release
of some software package.
Title: Teach Yourself Great Web Design in a Week
Author: Anne-Rae Vasquez
Publisher: Sams.net
ISBN: 1-57521-253-6
List Price: $49.99
"...
a valuable resource for anybody thinking about putting up
a web site."
http://www.cstudies.ubc.ca/internet/releases/annraepr.htm

Digital
Design Lessons: UBC Internet Program Participant Writes
Book on Web Design
For
Immediate Release
VANCOUVER - June 23, 1997: Web authoring takes on a double
meaning for University of British Columbia Certificate in
Internet Publishing participant Anne-Rae Vasquez
who, in addition to creating Web pages, also writes about
them in her new book Teach Yourself Great Web Design
in a Week. Written with co-author Paul Chow and published
by SamsNet Publishing, Vasquez’s book teaches the
novice Web site publisher tips and techniques for turning
ho-hum web pages into eye-catching, well-designed sites.
"It’s
not hard to put up a site on the Internet," says Vasquez,
"but if you want to stand out from thousands of other
sites and keep visitors coming back, you need a site that’s
esthetically pleasing and thoughtfully designed." Teach
Yourself Great Web Design in a Week teaches basic design
elements, such as white space, layout, typography, colour,
graphics and animation. It also shows common design errors
and how to avoid them. "We’re proud that one of our
program participants has co-authored such a useful book
by a major publisher," states William Koty, Coordinator
of the UBC Certificate in Internet Publishing. "It’s
a statement about the quality of the program and the high
caliber of its participants."
Anne-Rae
Vasquez lives in Vancouver and has been involved
with the Internet since the early 1990’s when text-based
Web browsers such as Lynx were the norm. "Having been
online since the beginning of the graphical World Wide Web,
I’ve seen my share of good and bad Web sites." In addition
to many years of practical experience, Vasquez’s
formal training at UBC’s Certificate in Internet Publishing
and her work with AR&B Internet Site & Publishing
Inc., the Web design company she runs with co-author Paul
Chow, have made her a relative expert in this new field.
Vasquez and fellow UBC Internet participants Brian
Waring and Simone O’Bryne have founded The Digital Artisan,
an online resource directory for media-related employers
and freelancers.
Teach
Yourself Great Web Design in a Week includes a CD-ROM
and has an accompanying web site which can be found at www.arnb.com/webdesign/.
The book is available at bookstores across Canada for a
suggested retail price of $70.95 Cdn.
Launched
in January 1996 by Continuing Studies’ Computer Science
Department, the UBC Certificate in Internet Publishing now
has over 80 participants. Targeted to communication professionals
with diverse backgrounds, the curriculum teaches all aspects
of Internet publishing, including design, authoring, programming,
project management and online marketing. UBC Continuing
Studies also offers over 50 Internet-related courses each
semester for the general public.
http://www.exam-ta.ac.uk/greatweb.htm
et@ Online
Review
teach
yourself Great
Web Design in
a Week
Anne-Rae
Vasquez and Paul Chow
This book
grabs your attention immediately. It is in full colour.
As you glance through the pages, your eyes sight colourful
images of colourful websites - and it rapidly becomes apparent
that, for a better read, you need to sit down with more
time.
The authors
jump straight into it - head, body and foot ! Like they
say: "Using your head wisely; Do you like my body ?;
Who reads your bottom ?" That just about sums up why
you can design great web pages in a week !
You cover
two chapters per day over a seven day period. At the end
of the week, if you have faithfully followed the tutorials,
you can justly claim to be "HTML enabled".
As the
authors say anyone can learn basic HTML but that doesn't
mean they will have great web pages. Why design by trial
and error when this publication provides short-cuts to effective
design ?
The authors
show you ready-to-use techniques: layout, images, animated
GIFS, typography, buttons, backgrounds, a user-friendly
interface, researching, effective navigation, effective
colours, style sheets, frames and tables, and lots of interesting
and useful links.
In short,
this book is about great design
- and the authors deliver what they promise.
The CD-ROM
includes all the examples from the book as well as useful
software to speed up your design efforts.
http://www.froschweb.com/iac/5.html
Internet
Advanced Class
"...Let's
first review some ideas we had earlier on and illustrate
them using do's and dont's in web design (partly adapted
from: Anne Rae Vasquez and Paul Chow, Teach
yourself great web design in a week, Sams.net, 1997)"
http://www.henry.k12.ga.us/pges/tutorial/credits.htm
Creating
Simple Web Pages for Teachers
"The following sources were consulted in the creation
of this tutorial:
- Maran, Ruth and Paul Whiteheadd. Creating Web
Pages Simplified. Foster City, CA: IDG
Books Worldwide, 1996.
- Lamb, Annette. Spinnin' the Web:
Designing and Developing Web Projects. Emporia,
KN: Vision to Action, 1998.
- Vasquez, Anne-Rae and Paul Chow. Teach
Yourself Great Web Design in a Week. Indianapolis,
IN: Sams.net Publishing, 1997
Pleasant Grove Elementary
School
150 Reagan Road
Stockbridge, Georgia
30281
USA
Phone: 770/898-0176
Fax: 770/898-0185
School e-mail: pges@henry.k12.ga.us
These pages maintained
by Dianne Prager,
Library Media Specialist
Updated 1-14-99 "
Creating Commercial
Web Pages That Sizzle
Dateline: 09/07/97
There is no trick to putting up a commercial Web site.
Anyone can do it with a little knowledge and a little work.
But making one that really shines, and works--that's
a different matter. In a previous feature article
called, Adding
Credibility to Your Web Site, I said there is more to
putting up a winning Web site than just a good design. You
have to establish the credibility of your business with
everyone who visits your site. This week I want to
provide a list of resources you can use to turn a merely
functional site into a spectacular site that is sure to
draw raves and customers.
Where to Start
The first thing to do is to determine what you are trying
to accomplish with your site. Then think about who your
audience is. Is it a arrow audience or a broad one? What
type of style will appeal best to that audience: formal,
quirky, professional, trendy casual? What types of graphics,
audio, video will your audience expect?
It takes bandwidth to achieve many of the coolest effects.
That translates into waiting time for the viewer. Will your
audience have the patience to wait? Finally, will
your audience be willing to purchase y our products or services
online, or will they just want information?
Often the best place to start work on a Web site is to
look at other sites. Find the best and the worst sites out
there, and focus on those that do something similar to what
your site will do. Look at the features that make
each site outstanding or horrible. You'll soon notice certain
similarities among sites. The best ones will present their
material well. They'll grab the viewer from the start and
entice them to explore the whole site. The purpose of the
site will be clear from the start and throughout the whole
site. There will be a certain constancy throughout the whole
site in terms of colors, fonts, graphics and information.
One of the most important ways to establish credibility
on a site is always to have contact information on every
page. The site should be easy to navigate. No dead ends,
broken graphics, missing pages or construction signs. Bad
sites will fall down in all of these areas.
There are bad pages all over the Web. You can find
many of them in one place at
Web
Pages That Suck. You'll get a few laughs and
learn how pages suffer because of a lack of good content
and design.
Truly good sites exist as well and one way to find them
is to look at the sites that issue awards which you can
do by following the award link back to the site that issued
the award. The most useful sites here are those that list
the criteria they use to give out awards. If the criteria
match your needs, use use them and the winning sites as
models. A good example is Marketing
Excellence Award winners
from Focus Associates
Designed to Help
Once you've figured out the purpose of your site, its audience,
and the overall impression you want to create, it's time
to do some storyboarding and mapping. Storyboarding helps
you create a flow and a constant theme and look throughout
your pages. Mapping helps you determine what to put where,
to see what is missing, and to maintain a sense of structure
for your site.
Doing these on paper may seem old-fashioned in this day
of WYSIWYG editing, but putting ideas and structures on
paper is still an excellent way to see what you are doing
before you start creating your site and often can help you
come up with new, better ways of creating your site.
There are many resources you can turn to for help when
designing your site. Some good books include Teach
Yourself Great Web Design in a Week by Anne-Rae
Vasquez and Paul Chow, Creating Commercial
Web Pages by Brian K. Murphy and Laura Lemay, and Creating
Commercial Web Sites by Brad and Kim Hampton.
On-line Web page design resources are numerous. You can
find hundreds at Yahoo!,
but here are some good sites to look at first:
- a tutorial for designing a business Web site
- online publication devoted to Web page design
- tips from Web page conception to programming
- design help for those who know htmL or who have a WYSIWYG
editor
- a place to learn basic Web page design
- a good design resource directory
- Web authoring and design tips
- listing of recommended design resources and tools.
Specialized Help
There are also plenty of Web sites that offer help for
specialized aspects of Web page design such as creating
logos, banner ads, compression, graphics and more. Sites
of special note include:
- tips for using color graphics and compression
- how to create a logo and many other useful tips
- lots of graphics tips and tricks
- Java scripts for the taking
- backgrounds, balls and graphics programs.
In case you start to get carried away with all the graphics
effects you can create (remember The
Web
Pages That Suck), read The
Color of Money which cautions against using distracting
colors and backgrounds on Web pages.
Get Graphic
You can find free graphics all over the Web. Check
these out first:
- animated GIFs and more
- how to develop and design good Web graphics
- more animated GIFs, divided into categories
- all kinds of graphics freebies
- graphics techniques, images, icons and tools.
The Last Words
Before you finish up your Web site, remember two things:
- People use all kinds of browsers, with all kinds of
settings on all kinds of computers. Check out as many
as different configurations and combinations as you can.
Just because you have a T-1 connection for your Pentium
II with its 21" monitor running Netscape Navigator
4, don't expect everyone else to. They don't. Always remember
to consider monitor size, resolution, connect speed and
loading time before you get too fancy on our site. To
see what your pages look like on different browsers, try
Bobby,
a program that finds htmL incompatibility problems for
different Web browsers.
- The WWW really is the World-Wide Web. You can get visitors
from anywhere in the world.
Thinking
International is a checklist of considerations
before you launch your Web site in other countries, The
World Is Your Market: Multilingual
Web Sites tells why a business with a Web site
is inherently an international business and how to make
your site international user-friendly, and When
In Paris: See Your Site as Others See It
provides tips on internationalizing your Web site.
Sensibilities and sensitivities vary with cultures and
countries, so exercise a little caution if at all in doubt
and seek help from professionals if you anticipate a large
international market exposure
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