Stunning Stop-Motion Animation: Ten Examples

Post Author By Scott, January 27th, 2010 in Design Articles, Inspiration, Photography, Showcase | 3 Super Comments

Lately if you have been browsing the video sharing web sites and communities, you’ve seen a rise in stop-motion animated clips, from commercials to music videos and school projects. Stop-motion is simply frame-by-frame animation using still photos, with objects and/or actors moved incrementally between shots to create the illusion of movement. It’s an old medium, pre-dating the advent of modern motion picture and video cameras.  And it can be pretty labor-intensive! But it also can produce some spectacular effects, as in the following set of some favorite (and mostly fairly recent) stop-motion shorts. Anything here to provide new ideas or inspiration to designers? I think plenty, but you be the judge.

1. KaBoom! by PES

This is the latest work by the amazing stop-motion film artist known as PES. If you haven’t come across PES before, enjoy!

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Five Great Design Magazines

Post Author By Scott, December 14th, 2009 in Design Articles | 4 Super Comments

We, as designers, need lots of inspiration daily to help us come up with great visual ideas.

For every new project, there is a research phase when we look into a great amount of visual information, be it design books, magazines, web sites, annuals and more. It is important to stay updated with the latest news and trends in the design world and we browse daily in search of new resources to keep us sharp and well documented.

If online there are thousands of designer’s web sites, archives, blogs, magazines and more to get inspired and learn from, offline there are only a few great magazines you can subscribe to and check out monthly at least, helping you being a better designer.

So here are 5 prestigious design and designer magazines you need to look into:

Wallpaper

wallpaper

Wallpaper covers all creative industries, from interior design to fashion and architecture and it is the best at this, offering lots of information and features.

http://www.wallpaper.com/
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Blog Thievery Part Two

Post Author By Scott, August 13th, 2009 in Design Articles | 8 Super Comments

The good people at “Programming Blog” are spreading the word about my post yesterday on blog theft:
That’s a joke, as I hope is obvious. The entire blog theft post was stolen and republished at neurosoftware.ro/programming-blog, without permission or attribution. I’m looking forward to seeing this new one on their site as well.

Meanwhile there have been some changes to report overnight regarding the Sydney Australia blog scraper site affiliated with Shift Interactive. Apparently my post was noticed, because all URLs on the webdesignsydneyaustralia.com domain have been redirected to shiftinteractive.net.  So for now at least my 53 consecutive stolen Spoonfed Design posts are off that site, and hopefully will remain so.  They are still indexed in Google with scraper URLs, but eventually these will drop out and my duplicate content problems from that particular site will be resolved. Gee, thanks, Shift Interactive!

Interestingly, a number of other domains hosted on the same dizinc server are also now redirecting to shiftinteractive.net, although the Google cache shows these sites were up and running within the past week. On socialmediaaustralia.com, for example, we can no longer see the numerous  fanboy.com posts that were there last week.  Likewise, the site seotipstricks.com no longer shows the material from the Stepforth marketing blog it had published there recently. In both cases with the author’s permission, I’m sure.

I enjoyed looking at web2.0newsroom.com (that’s web 2.0 newsroom, get it?) because up until a day or two ago it displayed the same Wordpress theme as the site that was robbing Spoonfed Design:

Apart from the visual appeal there was  some great content here too–great because it came from a great blog,  profy.com.  But now it’s all gone,  it all redirects to Shift Interactive.

Now I don’t know too much about this, but is it really good for SEO to have dozens of smammy-sounding domains on the same DNS all redirecting to your main business site? Well I guess these guys are the experts.

Thanks for the great supportive comments on yesterday’s post!

How to Steal a Design Blog

Post Author By Scott, August 12th, 2009 in Design Articles, Web Design | 20 Super Comments

Here’s a post I wish I didn’t have to write, but it’s a cautionary tale for anyone out there still going to the trouble of producing original content. In the design realm lately it seems that there are as many “bloggers” ripping off other people’s content as writing their own. And I don’t mean in the legitimate way of publishing excerpts and links to good stories from other sites with proper acknowledgment. I mean outright thievery.

The last 53 posts on Spoonfed Design have been copied in their entirety, without permission or attribution, on the site webdesignsydneyaustralia.com. This is an example of blog scraping at it’s worst. All of SFD’s  original content published since February 12, 2009 has simply been lifted and republished on this site without so much as a thank you. The past 39 consecutive posts on the Sydney site, without exception, are posts from Spoonfed Design.

The offending site is part of a blog farm designed to funnel traffic to a Sydney-based design and SEO firm called Shift Interactive.  How do I know that? Well, Shift Interactive is owned by a gentleman named Jamie Harbison, who also turns up on a WhoIs search as the admin contact for the scraper site. When I sent a polite note to Jamie asking for removal of my material from his site, twice, I received no reply. But one thing did change: the scraper site URL stated above now redirects to shiftinteractive.net.   That has only made things worse from my perspective, as I’ll go on to explain. But first, here’s a look at the scraper site homepage as of a few days ago, from the Google cache:

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Accessible Design: the Web for Everyone

Post Author By Michelle Shull, July 31st, 2009 in Design Articles, Web Design | No Comments Yet

Access All WWW Areas graphicToday I am writing about a topic which is close to my heart: accessible design. In simplest terms, accessible design is making sure your web content is available and understandable to all audiences, including people with visual or other disabilities.

Accessible web design allows individuals who are visually impaired or non-readers to experience web content through screen readers, which translate text into speech. The practice of accessible design also includes modified or unique interfaces, like single button computer input devices and touch screens. It is a part of a larger movement called Universal Design, which seeks to make all parts of the world accessible for all people, regardless of ability.

This article will focus on web design. Future pieces may explore various computer interface devices designed for individuals with disabilities, but today we’ll be limiting our focus to how designers might better address the needs of all readers. (more…)

The Snazzy Web: Four Trends in Innovative Web Design

Post Author By Michelle Shull, July 9th, 2009 in Design Articles, Web Design | 4 Super Comments

Four styles dominate the current trends in web design. Many lists have been compiled of the best examples of each, so in this article we’re going to examine what makes each style unique.

Hand-Drawn

Hand-drawn web design is a relatively new innovation, although I have seen some web designers experimenting with the concept for a few years. I think some of the inspiration for this trend has come from scrapbookers and crafters. This style typically avoids any of the traditional “boxy” elements found in most conventional websites, instead relying on a more casual, freeform design.

Many hand-drawn sites use extra elements, like sticky notes or other embellishments, to achieve a very creative and personal design style. (Of course when some of these creative twists become ubiquitious they no longer seem so personal!) We can see lots of hand-drawn detail in television actress Mariska Hargitay’s personal website, below.

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110+ Awesome Resources for Popular Adobe Products

Post Author By Matt, March 16th, 2009 in Design Articles, Design Tools | 21 Super Comments

In the design community, there are so many resources at our fingertips to help us express our creativity. Here are 110 excellent websites, tutorials, and articles, and scripts to help you work with the more popular Adobe products including Photoshop, Illustrator, Fireworks, Flex, Flash, and After Effects.

Also, feel free to add your favorites to the list by leaving a comment!

Photoshop

Websites

Tutorial9

101

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