principles of design

The Most Valuable Book in My Design Library

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

When I first started writing HTML, I made a lot of design mistakes. In fact, I cringe when I think about some of them (and when I see some of them - damn you Archives.org!). I got better with time, but my best attempts still looked amateurish, and I was laughed out of many a web design forum!

Things started to change when I bought a book called The Non-Designer’s Design Book by Robin Williams.

The book is now in its third edition, and was well worth the price. This will probably be the only book I recommend, as it’s the only design book that ever did me much good.

You can find anything you want to know online about XHTML, CSS or PHP. Photoshop tutorials abound. But after reading this book, and learning about 4 principles of design - proximity, alignment, repetition, and contrast - I started looking at web pages with new eyes. I applied these principles to my own site with a new design, and presented it to my critics - much to my delight, they heaped praise on it, and laughter turned to respect for what I had learned.

The Non-Designer’s Design Book earns 5 flowers and deserves every one!

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