understanding visual hierarchy in web design

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Web Design Theory Sessions Session 1 Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design Presented by: Hashem E.Zahran.

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Page 1: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

Web Design Theory Sessions

Session 1

Understanding Visual

Hierarchy in Web Design

Presented by: Hashem E.Zahran.

Page 2: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

Session 1 Content

Understanding the theory behind Visual Hierarchy

Design=

CommunicationDawn of

HierarchyHierarchists

Toolbox

Failed Hierarchy

Hierarchy & Web Designers

Exercise to Test Hierarchy

Page 3: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

Design = Communication

understanding that people will see our designs in terms of relationships is crucial to becoming a more effective designer.

Page 4: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

Communicate Better

What do you see?

Page 5: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

Still Communicating?

What do you see?

Page 6: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

We

b D

esi

gn &

Co

mm

un

icat

ion

Web Design is all about:• Communicating Visual information.• Understanding people view relationships.

What Web Designers can do?Break down raw information into delicious chunks of visually relevant information that are easy on the eyes, and more importantly, effective at communicating the message behind a webpage.

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The Dawn of Hierarchy

even prehistoric man had a healthy respect for visual contrast.

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Healthy Visual Contrast

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Healthy Visual Contrast

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Let’s take a dive into some Deeper Examples of how you can apply this very basic principle to some very

sophisticated designs .

Alright, so this is all pretty basic stuff, right?

Are you ready?

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The Hierarchists Toolbox

size, color, contrast, alignment, repetition, proximity, density, whitespace, style, and texture

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SIZE

The use of BIG, bold type adds a level of order to this otherwise chaotic design. The eye should naturally move from big elements down to the smaller elements.

Page 13: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

COLOR

The Spectra Viewer site uses colors to represent different news categories, so it’s easy to find a particular type of information based on the color key.

Page 14: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

CONTRAST

The contrast between the light, airy header section and dark, earthy footer creates a distinct hierarchy of information.

Page 15: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

ALIGNMENT

The Stuff Template uses a unique horizontal alignment system to separate brand and navigation from blog post content.

Page 16: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

ALIGNMENT

The Flex Template uses a grid inspired layout to develop visually interest as well as a taxonomy driven visual hierarchy.

Page 17: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

REPETITION

The Virgin site creates repetitive elements like paragraph text, then breaks the repetition when it wants to draw attention (like the red quote text).

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PROXIMITY

In Tuts+ sites The left “content” column is clearly separated in proximity from the sidebar widget space. Furthermore, meta-data within a particular blog post is placed in close proximity of that post and further

from other posts, reinforcing a sense of “belonging”.

Page 19: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

DENSITY and WHITESPACE

By spacing elements out and keeping plenty of whitespace on the page, this design makes it easier for people to roam around and find the small, densely packed boxes of content.

Page 20: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

STYLE and TEXTURE

Jeff Finley’s site does a great job of combining a lot of the tools that we discussed here, but his use of originally styled elements over the standard UI fodder are what gives the entire design sense of intentional hierarchy. Jeff manages to add just enough style to make his site feel personal without it going overboard.

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Failed Hierarchy

hierarchy can be used for both good and evil

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The

Go

od

& T

he

Evi

lIt’s important to note that hierarchy can be used for both good and evil.

• Think of all the annoying Flash advertisements, popup windows, glitter banners, etc. that the web has been plagued with over the years!

• While these ads succeed in grabbing attention, they ultimately fail the site owner and the viewer by breaking the visual hierarchy within a site.

Page 23: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

The

Go

od

& T

he

Evi

lIt’s important to note that hierarchy can be used for both good and evil.

• Similarly, if a designer builds a visual hierarchy such that certain key pieces of information are nearly impossible to find, the designer will have failed at his task.

• Good visual hierarchy isn’t about wild and crazy graphics or the newest photoshop filters, it’s about organizing information in a way that’s usable, accessible, and logical to the everyday site visitor.

Page 24: Understanding Visual Hierarchy in Web Design

Why Hierarchy is Specially Relevant to Web Designers?

information overload seems to be commonplace.

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Designers can create normalcy out of chaos; they can clearly communicate ideas through the organizing and

manipulating of words and pictures.

-- Jeffrey Veen, The Art and Science of Web Design

The Art and Science of Web Design

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Regular web surfers have learned to “scan” content innately; automatically seeking information that is

relevant to their interests and discarding/disregarding information that doesn’t.

The Art and Science of Web Design

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An Exercise to testVisual Hierarchy

simple exercise

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1. List the key information points that visitors are likely seeking.2. Assign values (1-10) according to their importance to the

average visitor.3. Now, look at the actual design again.4. Assign values (1-10) according to the actual visual importance

as you see it in the live design.5. Consider: Does the expected importance match up with the

actual designed importance?

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?This is it…Any questions?

www.HashemZahran.com - www.eSpace.com.eg - Follow me: @antikano