Produktbild: Design for Hackers

Design for Hackers Reverse Engineering Beauty

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

21.10.2011

Abbildungen

w. col. Illustrationen

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

338

Maße (L/B/H)

23,5/19,1/1,9 cm

Gewicht

661 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-99895-2

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

21.10.2011

Abbildungen

w. col. Illustrationen

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

338

Maße (L/B/H)

23,5/19,1/1,9 cm

Gewicht

661 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-99895-2

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Design for Hackers
  • Introduction 1

    Design as Literacy 2

    The Hacker Attitude 3

    The Gap in Design Knowledge 5

    Part I: Understanding Design

    Chapter 1 Why Design Matters 9

    What Design Really Is 11

    What Design Is Not 13

    The Layers of Design 15

    Purpose 17

    Medium and technology 17

    Aesthetic decisions 18

    Conclusion 18

    Chapter 2 The Purpose of Design 19

    Visual Design and Its Relation to User Experience Design 21

    The basics of user experience design 22

    The visual design of one product versus another 24

    Sometimes a Visual Design Is Just Good Enough 25

    Sometimes Visual Design Is Your Advantage 26

    Reverse-Engineering the Twitter User Experience 28

    User personas 29

    Use cases 30

    Wireframes 32

    Knowledge Applied 33

    Part II: Medium and Form

    Chapter 3 Medium and Form in Typography 37

    The Tragedy of Misuse: Why You Hate Comic Sans 38

    The Shackles of the Typographer: The Unalterable Word 45

    The Formation of Our Alphabet 47

    The Birth of Our Letters 50

    The Twitter of the Roman Empire 51

    The height of Roman typography 52

    The Type That Has Lived On 62

    The invention and spread of printing 63

    Punchcutting: The cradle of the unalterable word 64

    Venice and the Renaissance 65

    France and Garamond 66

    Garamond Today: Why You Don't Use Garamond on the Web 66

    The birth of the "web font" 67

    A great leap 68

    Bridging the gap 69

    Limitations can be embraced - even parodied 72

    Knowledge Applied 73

    Chapter 4 Technology and Culture 75

    How Trends Are Created 76

    The birth of Impressionism 76

    Impressionism and the middle class 78

    Impressionism and photography 79

    Impressionism and modern art 81

    Web 2 0 graphics 82

    How Apple started the Web 2 0 style 83

    How Aqua influenced the web 85

    How Aqua met Web 2 0 86

    Form shapes technology, this time 90

    SEO Is Design 90

    Understanding why SEO is important 93

    Choosing the right keywords 94

    Considering content and coding 96

    URL 97

    Title tag 97

    Meta tags 98

    Headers 98

    Content: em, strong, img 98

    Authority of linking pages 99

    Content of linking pages and of anchor text of links 100

    Everything in moderation 100

    Getting the content, getting the links 101

    Knowledge Applied 102

    Part III: Composition

    Chapter 5 Fool's Golden Ratio: Understanding Proportions 105

    What Is Proportion? 107

    Proportion and Design 109

    The Broken Promise of the Golden Ratio 110

    The golden ratio and the Fibonacci sequence: Similar, but different 112

    The golden ratio in the human form 113

    Misconceptions about the golden ratio 115

    The golden ratio in ancient Greece 115

    The golden ratio in fine art 117

    The golden ratio in nature 118

    The golden ratio in psychology 118

    Other Pleasing Proportions 119

    The root 2 rectangle 119

    The 2:3 rectangle 120

    The 3:4 rectangle 121

    Proportions in Our World 121

    Music and dance 122

    Nature 123

    Computers and mobile devices 125

    Proportions at Work 126

    Knowledge Applied 132

    Chapter 6 Holding the Eye: Composition and Design Principles 133

    Compositional Relationships 134

    Reading direction 135

    Guiding the eye with composition 136

    Renaissance sculpture 137

    Impressionist paintings 139

    Web design 140

    Foreground/background relationships 141

    In Seurat's painting 142

    In interface and web design 143

    Design Principles 144

    Dominance 144

    Similarity 146

    Rhythm 148

    Texture 150

    Direction 151

    Contrast 156

    Why the MailChimp Logo Is Beautiful: Use of Composition and Design Principles 157

    Foreground/background relationships 159

    Dominance 160

    Similarity 160

    Rhythm 162

    Texture 163

    Direction 163

    Contrast 163

    Knowledge Applied 165

    Chapter 7 Enlivening Information: Establishing a Visual Hierarchy 167

    What I Mean by "Hierarchy" 168

    Hierarchy is expressive 170

    Many visual factors can affect hierarchy 170

    Hierarchical Factors in Isolation 171

    White space 172

    Using a grid to manage white space 172

    Establishing a hierarchy with white space 173

    Knowing how much white space to use 175

    Considering white space and italic font style 175

    Using a four-column grid 176

    Type weight and size 177

    Type weight 177

    Type size 179

    Combining weight and size 181

    Color 181

    Visual ornamentation 182

    Hierarchy at Work 187

    Knowledge Applied 190

    Part IV: Color

    Chapter 8 Color Science 195

    What Is Color? 197

    The Tricks Your Eyes Play 198

    Metamerism 199

    Color constancy 199

    Afterimages 200

    How the Visual System Works 201

    Cones 201

    Trichromatic theory and color opponent theory 202

    Mixing of dominant wavelengths and the color wheel 204

    Colorblindness 205

    Defining Color 207

    Munsell 208

    Hue, saturation, and brightness 209

    Lab color model 210

    Color Models and Data-Driven Graphics 211

    Color and qualitative data 211

    Color and quantitative data 212

    Sequential versus diverging color palettes 216

    Thinking in Hexadecimal Color: Understanding the Colors of the Web 217

    Understanding RGB 218

    How hexadecimal represents RGB 220

    Mentally navigating the hexadecimal "cube" 221

    The future: HSL 224

    Color Models in Action: Why Your Business Card Doesn't (and Never Will) Match Your Website 225

    RGB displays versus CMYK color printing 226

    Color gamuts 227

    Working across media and managing color 229

    Adobe RGB versus sRGB 230

    "Proofing" and previewing color shifts 231

    Printing with spot colors 232

    Knowledge Applied 233

    Chapter 9 Color Theory 235

    Color Response throughout Human History 237

    Color Response and Human Biology 237

    The Power of Red: Why You Don't Stand a Chance in the "Target Challenge" 238

    The effect of red on your brain 239

    The prefrontal cortex and rational thought 239

    The attack on your prefrontal cortex 240

    The prefrontal cortex and decision-making 241

    Color and context 243

    What this means to you 244

    Research on Other Colors 245

    Color and Culture 246

    Color Schemes and the Color Wheel 247

    Color Choices and Web Conventions 249

    Backgrounds 249

    White 249

    Off-white 250

    Dark 250

    Bright 250

    Graphics and text 251

    Green 252

    Yellow 252

    Red 253

    Blue 254

    Accent colors 254

    The Interaction of Colors: Why Monet Never Used Black 255

    The Impressionists: Masters of color 256

    Color theory: What the Impressionists discovered 256

    Warm colors pop, cool colors recede 257

    Tints pop, shades recede 257

    The importance of context 258

    Temperature versus tint 258

    How Monet used color 260

    Using color like Monet 262

    Enriching your typography 262

    Adding life to your graphics 263

    Color Schemes 264

    Monochromatic 265

    Analogous 267

    Complementary 269

    Split-complementary 271

    Triadic 274

    Tetradic 276

    Variations 276

    Creating a Mood with Color 280

    Mysterious or exclusive 280

    Active 280

    Muted 283

    Natural 284

    Tools for Creating Color Palettes and Schemes 285

    Knowledge Applied 287

    Part V: Appendixes

    Appendix A Choosing and Pairing Fonts 291

    Classifying Typefaces 293

    Serif typefaces 294

    Old style 294

    Transitional 294

    Modern 295

    Slab-serif 295

    Sans-serif typefaces 296

    Display typefaces 296

    Looking At Letter Structure: The Form of the Skeleton 297

    Humanist typefaces 297

    Geometric typefaces 298

    Realist typefaces 298

    Pairing Fonts 298

    The rule 299

    The exception to the rule 299

    Why certain fonts pair well 301

    Texture 301

    Character width 304

    The ultimate cheat: Staying faithful to a typographer 306

    All the Fonts You'll Ever Need 307

    Appendix B Typographic Etiquette 311

    Distorting Type: What Not to Do 313

    Fake bold 313

    Fake italic 314

    Fake small caps 314

    Stretching type 317

    Outlining type 317

    Type and images or textures 318

    Setting Body Copy 319

    Indicating a change in paragraphs 319

    Avoiding justified type 321

    Avoiding widows and orphans 322

    Tending to Typographic Details 323

    Not all quotes are created equal 323

    Using dashes dashingly 324

    One space after a period, not two 324

    Ligatures bring letters together 325

    Index 329