Description

Book Synopsis
Discover the techniques behind beautiful design?by deconstructing designs to understand them The term 'hacker' has been redefined to consist of anyone who has an insatiable curiosity as to how things work and how they can try to make them better.

Table of Contents

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

Design for Hackers

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    A Paperback / softback by David Kadavy

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      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 21/10/2011
      ISBN13: 9781119998952, 978-1119998952
      ISBN10: 1119998956

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Discover the techniques behind beautiful design?by deconstructing designs to understand them The term 'hacker' has been redefined to consist of anyone who has an insatiable curiosity as to how things work and how they can try to make them better.

      Table of Contents

      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

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