[Grok-dev] Alternative look for grok.zope.org
Kevin Teague
kevin at bud.ca
Tue May 29 00:26:20 EDT 2007
On May 28, 2007, at 4:22 AM, Sebastian Ware wrote:
> Would people rather want me to develop this look:
>
> http://www.urbantalk.se/DEVELOPER/grok/grok_r3
>
> Compared to the previously suggested one:
>
> http://www.urbantalk.se/DEVELOPER/grok
>
> Maybe the first suggestion was too stylish?
My opinions on style of a Grok site:
Colors
---------
I used the original Grok illustrations as a basis, choosing orange as
the primary colour, tempered with shades of grey that suggest stone.
I think it might be worthwhile to lay out a few colour palettes for
comparison, and then try and have the design work within that palette.
I do like the colours used on the existing design - although I did
select them - in particular the orange used in the existing Grok logo
area, which was just sampled from the orange in the original Grok
illustrations. As for the other flavours of orange in the body text,
sometimes I think this looks quite fun, and other times this feels
like a bit much.
Orange can be a difficult colour to design with. I noticed that the
Joyent site uses a significant amount of orange (and lots other
colours) and still does an excellent job of walking the line between
professional and fun (they also do a bang-up job with their
illustrations):
http://joyent.com/
I would be quite happy if we had a design that was heavily "informed"
by the Joyent style. Although we will have a lot of text on the Grok
site, and for extended reading of body text it wears on the eyes for
anything that's not set against a white background.
Logo
-------
The Grok logo is a separate discussion. Perhaps we should be working
towards an official logo before moving onto the the next design
iteration?
In particular, adding additional aesthetic elements that are not part
of the core logo to the design can be distracting. Often you have
something that looks very nice in the context of a particular header,
but doesn't look so good if set against a plain background color.
Hopefully we can also have a logo that retains a distinctive
character even when reduced to a small size.
I had some ideas about using the typeface on the existing site, and
applying the leopard patterened swatches from Grok's tunic to the
inside of the typeface. I am doubtful if this could be successfully
pulled off though.
Something that conveyed the lettering "Grok" carved from stone could
look very good. It would take considerable skill to be able to pull
this off successfully in a logo though.
Illustration
--------------
The caveman illustration rocks. Grok, the caveman, is colourful and
playful. It makes we want to use Grok a lot :)
The existing illustration is tricky to integrate with the rest of
design because of the loose, hand-drawn nature of the illustration
style. You can't set it against any background colour other than
white. I think it might be possible to do a convincing clean-up job
on it in Photoshop, but you would still be loosing some of the
character of the work. I think it would be better to set the Grok
illustration against a large white background area, and then layer
any elements of the site design so that they overlap portions of the
illustration.
If we can think of Grok pose that works will the end design and then
have a new Grok illustration produced that would also awesome. I did
some sketches of Grok, but they are not as good as the originals by
Felicia.
Primary Navigation
--------------------------
I agree that the existing icons need more contrast. I would disagree
that we want to have icons as part of the navigation. The words we
have (evaluate, learn, develop, share, download) say all we need to,
and it can be very difficult to produce attractive looking icons -
and even if we did have such an asset for the site, I still think
icons detract too much from the primary content areas.
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