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Archive for January, 2017

Etsy’s Evolving Icon System

January 9th, 2017 No comments

Etsy moves away from an icon font in production to using SVG. It’s going to be an inline system, but abstracted as a custom element for ease of use.

Two cents:

  • I could see the need for that abstraction going away if we had a more convient syntax for available, like:
  • I like how dedicated they are to icon consistency. I struggle with this a lot. An SVG icon process can be so easy to work with, and new icons so easy to find and drop in, that consistency can suffer. That grid, with the examples, is gold.
  • They are still building an icon font as part of the build process, for the designers to use in design software.

That last one is surprising to me, as I would think it would be a pain in the butt to find the right icon to design with when the one you need is assigned to some random character in the font. I would think the concept of “Symbols” in Sketch or Illustrator would make the way to make those icons super easy to find and use for designers. Which makes me think what the font actually has to offer is interoperability between design software. I wonder if software like Lingo or Iconjar would be helpful here.

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Etsy’s Evolving Icon System is a post from CSS-Tricks

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Bringing Your App’s Data To Every User’s Wrist With Android Wear

January 9th, 2017 No comments

The most popular mobile operating system is known to be Android. One of the main reasons for its popularity is its ability to run on a huge number of devices, not only on phones and tablets. We find Android on TVs, watches, cars, even fridges and mirrors.

Android Wear is the version of the operating system specifically designed to extend the Android platform to wearables, with particular attention to smartwatches. These devices allow the user to consume information in a completely different way than traditional handheld devices: Data is presented at the right time depending on the user’s context, and interaction is less invasive and time-consuming than in a phone app.

The post Bringing Your App’s Data To Every User’s Wrist With Android Wear appeared first on Smashing Magazine.

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Motors, a WordPress Theme for the Automotive Branch

January 9th, 2017 No comments

You think you wouldn’t be able to provide a website like the large car brands do? You believe creating a website like mobile.de or autotrader.com was out of your reach? You’re wrong. All you need is the Motors theme by StyleMixThemes.

StyleMixThemes, Experts for Tailor-made Themes

It all started with the gastronomy theme “Bon Appetit”, which we’ve presented last year. Then, just recently, the theme “Consulting” came out. That’s what motivated me to dig a bit deeper into the theme portfolio of StyleMixThemes. Because it’s very clear that these guys take a really close look before building a theme for particular purposes.

Just when I thought that “Consulting” was an impressive accomplishment, I found “Motors”. “Motors” is a dream for anyone who is actively selling, repairing, or otherwise working in the automotive branch.

Motors, a Multi-Purpose Theme With Five Application Areas

“Motors” is the theme for you if you want to sell cars, motorcycles, or boats; or if you want to run a mediation platform like mobile.de or autotrader.com, or a service and repair workshop. Yes, this variety is astounding. What’s even more astounding is, that every solution for every use case looks equally fantastic.

It doesn’t matter if it’s about a feature overview, a feature comparison between different cars, a finance calculator, or an elaborate search function for brand, features, or individidual characteristics; “Motors” is an architecture master piece.

Selling Cars, Motorcycles, Boats

In this category, the individual offers mostly only differ regarding the included demo content. So when you want to serve one of the three categories, accessing the respective demo content is not a problem, as well as changing everything to match your taste, allowing your shop to be online in no time.

For each category, StyleMixThemes has a custom demo, as well as a whole bunch of screenshots that can introduce you to the features.

Motors for Car Vendors. (Screenshot: StyleMixThemes)

The heart of the Motors theme, when it comes to selling vehicles, is the “Inventory Manager”. This very flexible tool lets you build clear listings and detail views of your complete range of offers. If you’re already working with the “Automanager”, you’ll be happy to hear that “Motors” works with that fully integrated. The data captured in the Automanager can easily be imported to Motors via XML. This effectively avoids double and triple input effort.

The most profound impression can be gained by taking the total of six minutes to watch the following three videos:

“Motors” does not come without a learning curve, but it is very well documented.

Service and Repair Services

A pure repair workshop or other services can also be operated using “Motors”. Naturally, the required scope of functions is much smaller in this segment. Thus, “Motors” is using a one-pager with demo content that you simply replace with your own.

Appointment Arrangement for Service Workshops via Motors Theme. (Screenshot: Noupe Magazine)

Mediating Vehicles

The mediation platform that “Motors” lets you create doesn’t quite match the scope of functions of the platforms leading the market, like mobile.de. In return, it runs on your domain, and with your vehicles, and the ones your customers add, only. Basically, this part of “Motors” is some type of classified ads market with a focus on automotive.

The Google Maps integration enables you to determine the distance between potential buyer and vendor. It’s obvious that this is rather important when it comes to private offers.

Motors as a Car Market. (Screenshot: StyleMixThemes)

“Motors” Theme: Under the Hood

You can probably already imagine that “Motors” is one of those themes where your decision to use it is irreversible. This is not a disadvantage, but something to be aware of in advance. “Motors” adds features to your WordPress that you wouldn’t have without it. To do so, some more massive alterations – even into the database structure – are necessary. „Motors” is more of an application than a mere theme.

The theme’s basic layout builds on Bootstrap 3. This way, it’s clear that it is responsive across all possible devices. Of course, userfriendliness is highest on the desktop view. However, I was surprised about how userfriendly the complex functionality is realized for mobile devices.

For an impressive presentation, “Motors” delivers both the popular “Revolution Slider”, as well as the not any less popular pagebuilder plugin “Visual Composer”. With the combination of both of these tools, there’s barely anything to be desired in terms of design. And all of this requires no code knowledge at all.

As you certainly already expected, “Motors” works very smoothly in conjunction with WooCommerce. In case you want to establish paid offers, the Paypal integration could be interesting for you.

SEO and Social Sharing were also kept in mind. Both aspects are covered well by the theme. Social Media is accessible from every corner. Another speciality: with a custom calculator, your customers can calculate respective financing conditions directly on your page.

“Motors” knows English, German, French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, as well as Arabic. As it works with WPML, you can create your own translations, should the included languages not be sufficient.

“Motors” has been out for nearly a year now, and has since seen continuous development. The most recent version is from the 15th of December 2016.

Low Price, High Performance

“Motors” costs 79 USD. This includes updates for half a year, extensions are available. The price also includes the license for the “Revolution Slider”, valued at 19 USD, as well as the license for the “Visual Composer”, worth 34 USD. Thus, the actual theme only costs 26 USD. Regarding the provided performance, both the 79, as well as the 26 USD are almost laughable. No matter how you calculate, at most, you’ll get to a bit more than your own hourly rate, but you’re saving a massive amount of hours when you consider the time it would take to build this type of solution yourself.

Aside the already mentioned, very detailed documentation, you’re buying a 24-hour service on five days a week. Take a look.

By the way: If you believe that you can’t lift a project of this size on your own, the guys of StyleMixThemes will be happy to take care of the installation and adjustment for you, however, this will require additional payment. To do so, simply request an offer. Of course, support that helps you help yourself, is free.

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ColorMe / CSS Color Level 4

January 8th, 2017 No comments

Does this look weird?

.element {
  background: color(#eb8fa9 alpha(75%) blackness(20%));
}

That’s the “color function” from a draft spec from the CSS working group. I think it’s all about making colors a little easier and more intuitive to work with. Looks awesome to me, as someone who uses Sass color manipulation functions quite a bit.

Tyler Gaw made a cool tool to play with it:

I notice in the spec that this seems to actually be color-mod() though, not color(). It probably changed, as I see there are some articles and plugins that talk about it as color().

That’s the danger of trying to polyfill future CSS with the exact names you think it will use. If you’re right, hopefully, one day you can remove it and all will be well. If you’re wrong, you can never stop using it, because the code that’s left won’t work (unless you rewrite it). You’re also hoping that the polyfill is written in a way that takes advantage of the new syntax instead when it can instead of only processing it down to an older syntax. I think I prefer on-purpose differently-named abstractions.


ColorMe / CSS Color Level 4 is a post from CSS-Tricks

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Popular design news of the week: January 2, 2017 – January 8, 2017

January 8th, 2017 No comments

Every week users submit a lot of interesting stuff on our sister site Webdesigner News, highlighting great content from around the web that can be of interest to web designers.

The best way to keep track of all the great stories and news being posted is simply to check out the Webdesigner News site, however, in case you missed some here’s a quick and useful compilation of the most popular designer news that we curated from the past week.

Note that this is only a very small selection of the links that were posted, so don’t miss out and subscribe to our newsletter and follow the site daily for all the news.

The Best and Worst User Interfaces of 2016

Improve the Look of Links with the CSS Text Decoration Module

30 Truly Interactive Websites Built with CSS & JavaScript

CSS Grid is Coming

The Future is Now: 10 Design Predictions for 2017

Adobe XD – Your New Favorite Design tool?

Introducing Panda Search

20 Awesome Free Hipster Fonts

React Cheat Sheet

Choosing the Correct Average

The Most Important Tech Trend of 2017

Online SVG Icons to Font Generator

Color Supply

Manifesto for the New Design

6 Characteristics of Successful Freelancers: Do You Have Them?

How Artificial Intelligence is Changing Design

How to Design with Pantone’s Color of the Year

The 100 Best WordPress Plugins for 2017

Beware of Developers Who do Negative Work

50 Great Free Handwriting Fonts

My Beef with the Hamburger Menu

The State of Design Tools in 2017

3,900 Pages of Paul Klee’s Personal Notebooks Now Online

Why Web Design Needs UX Experts

Design or Get Off the Pot

Want more? No problem! Keep track of top design news from around the web with Webdesigner News.

LAST DAY: 2350+ Graphic Design Elements and Patterns – only $21!

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Web Awards for Horizontal and Vertical Writings

January 7th, 2017 No comments

“Tate-Yoko Web Award” is an award given to those who are willing to challenge the web typography of the next generation by designing and utilizing new typesetting standards in the latest CSS codings.

Maybe the award site should win the award.

Direct Link to ArticlePermalink


Web Awards for Horizontal and Vertical Writings is a post from CSS-Tricks

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xvg

January 7th, 2017 No comments

Varun Vachhar:

A Chrome extension for debugging SVG paths by converting them to outlines and displaying anchors, control points, handles and arc ellipses.

An amazing contribution to this open source project would be to make all those points draggable, and then be able to spit out the newly adjusted code.

Also, weren’t browser extensions on their way to being interoperable? Looks like the community group has significant work done.

Direct Link to ArticlePermalink


xvg is a post from CSS-Tricks

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Comics of the week #373

January 7th, 2017 No comments

Every week we feature a set of comics created exclusively for WDD.

The content revolves around web design, blogging and funny situations that we encounter in our daily lives as designers.

These great cartoons are created by Jerry King, an award-winning cartoonist who’s one of the most published, prolific and versatile cartoonists in the world today.

So for a few moments, take a break from your daily routine, have a laugh and enjoy these funny cartoons.

Feel free to leave your comments and suggestions below as well as any related stories of your own…

A lot of nerve

Client from hell

Feedback paranoia

Can you relate to these situations? Please share your funny stories and comments below…

24 Flat, 3D Isometric Concepts and People – only $17!

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21 CTA Based Plugins for Better On-Page Optimization

January 6th, 2017 No comments

Using WordPress? Try These CTA Based Plugins for Better On-Page Optimization

WordPress powers nearly 5% of the entire web, and a quarter of the top 10,000 websites. Its ease of use, flexibility, and versatility account for its widespread adoption. Built with search engine optimization in mind, WordPress does a lot of the heavy lifting on the back end, but leaves on-page optimization up to you. The WordPress plugin repository comes to the rescue with a number of options for calls to action.

HubSpot found that using anchor text CTAs improved conversion rates by 121%. They also discovered that between 47% and 93% of a post’s leads only come from the anchor text CTAs. Data suggests that more than 90% of the visitors who read your headline also read your CTA copy, and emails using a single CTA increased clicks 371%, with 1617% sales increases.

01.Hello Bar

Want to grab user attention right away, but want to be unobtrusive about it? Hello Bar creates a small bar that displays across the top of your website, to encourage email subscription sign up. It’s free and integrates with several of the top email marketing platforms including Aweber, MailChimp, and Campaign Monitor. You can also drive traffic to a page, and get some basic split testing capabilities to see which phrasing gets the best conversion rate. The plugin is free, but a premium version is available. Contact for pricing.

02.OptinMonster

If you’re trying to build up your email list, OptinMonster is good to use because it because it provides a smooth opt-in box, rather than a popup. The form can be completely customized to your needs, or you can choose to use one of the many premade designs. It includes split-testing so you can see which copy converts the best for your audience, and provides page-level targeting so you can display different massages based on where visitors are on your website. Analytics are also built in, and it supports the most popular email marketing platforms. Pricing starts at $19/month, and annual plans are priced at $9/month.

03.MailMunch

Use MailMunch to create customizable calls to action that integrate with a number of email marketing platforms, including Constant Contact, Campaign Monitor, InfusionSoft, MailChip, and AWeber, to name a few. Once you sign up for your free MailMunch account, you can create your choice of a top bar, pop-up, sidebar opt-in, or a scroll-triggered box. If you want to add forms to more than a single site, get analytics, and other features, there are premium options, starting at $9/month with discounts for annual plans.

04.SumoMe ListBuilder

SumoMe offers a number of free tools to help you grow your website. The List Builder allows you to create a lightbox popup to increase email subscriptions. It works with MailChimp, Constanct Contact, GetResponse, Campaign Monitor, Exact Target, and more. Premium plans allow you to get all the pro apps and pay only for the traffic your site uses. Plans start at $29/month, paid annually.

05.Exit Intent

When a visitor leaves your website, Exit Intent gives you one more chance to grab their attention and convert them. Use it to display a special offer message as they’re going to leave your website.

06.Pippity

Pippity is a WordPress popup plugin that comes with 20 themes, all of which can be completely customized to fit your needs. The premium version includes analytics and split-testing so you can see what your audience responds best to. Pricing starts at $49/year.

07.Icegram

Icegram is a free plugin designed to capture leads and call your visitors to action. It allows you to to use popups, header and footer bars, notifications, messengers, and more. Premium pricing, at either $49/year or $99/year adds more features.

08.WP Subscribe Pro

WP Subscribe Pro is a premium email subscription plugin, priced at $29. It gives you plenty of options to help increase your subscription base. Options include transition popups, sidebar widgets, and more. It integrates with many third-party email marketing platforms including MailChimp and AWeber. A free version is also available.

09.WordPress Calls to Actions

Part of the Inbound Now marketing suite, WordPress Calls to Action allows you to place advertisements and calls to action anywhere you want across your entire website, including posts, pages, widgets, and custom post types. You can also create variations in your calls to action to perform split-testing. The plugin includes some call to action templates, but you can also design your own. It’s possible to collect the form submission data and store it in the Inbound Now leads database. The free version gives you access to landing pages, calls to action, and lead management. Paid plans start at $10/month.

10.Opt-In Content Locker

Opt-In Content Locker is a premium plugin, priced at $15. It allows you to offer exclusive content on your website to your email subscribers. Use shortcodes to lock the content, and once someone is confirmed as a subscriber, they can view it.

11.Boxzilla

Boxzilla allows you to build boxes that contain whatever you want, to slide or fade in at any point. You are in full control of the way the box looks, the way it is positioned, how it is animated, and how it fades. You also have the option to add-premium add-ons for $6/month or $60/year per site. You can choose to add features like triggering a box after a certain number of page views, after a certain amount of time spent on site, trigger a box when someone is leaving, hide boxes from current MailChimp subscribers, integrate with WooCommerce, and track all box interactions with Google Analytics.

12.Click to Tweet

Click to Tweet allows you to quickly and easily create custom tweets your visitors can send to Twitter with a click. This is great for promoting a contest, sale, or any other limited-time offer.

13.Bloom Email Opt-In

Bloom is one of the plugins from Elegant Themes, so you must join at either $89/year, or a one-time fee of $249 to gain access to it. It includes six display types, such as automatic opt-in popup or fly-in, inline, and widget areas. You also have the option to require the opt-in to unlock content. It works with 16 email marketing platforms, including InfusionSoft, AWeber, Feedblitz, and GetResponse.

14.Ultimate Social Media and Share Icons

Social buttons are CTAs of their own – telling visitors you want them to share the content on their favorite networks. Most visitors won’t take the time to manually share content on their own – so the buttons make it easy for them. While many themes have social media and share icons built in, for those that don’t, the Ultimate Social Media and Share Icons plugin will add icons for Facebook, Twitter, Email, RSS, and more than 200 other social channels. 16 icon designs are included, but there’s also the option to upload your own custom images.

15.MaxButtons

MaxButtons offers a button generator, social icon, and social sharing plugin all in one. Create buttons to draw attention. The premium version costs $19 and includes more options for shapes, colors, and gradients. You can also add every button they’ve created, and any new buttons they create for a year, for another $80.

16.Mango Buttons

Mango Buttons is a free and simple plugin that allows you to add buttons anywhere in your pages or posts. You can add text and icons, and adjust colors to grab user attention.

17.Top Bar

Top Bar is a free plugin that allows you to add text with a linked button to the top of your WordPress pages, in an effort to drive traffic to another page. A premium version, priced at $12 for a single site, or $49 for unlimited sites, is available that allows you to further customize the user experience with colors, user restrictions, and timing.

18.PopUp Domination

PopUp Domination is a premium service, with pricing starting at $9/month, with discounts on annual plans. Pricing is based on popup views, ranging from 30,000 to 1 million. The platform works with all websites and email providers. It includes email themes, redirect themes, exit popups, split testing, popup triggers, split testing, analytics, and more.

19.Ninja Popups

A premium plugin available for $25, Ninja Popups includes a drag and drop visual editor to make it easy to create your own custom popups in no time. It includes more than 50 themes to help get you started, with eight free opt-in panels, and 74 animations. If that’s not enough, there are add-ons available for more widgets, themes, and opt-in bars. It works with many of the top email marketing platforms, such as MailChimp, AWeber, GetResponse, InfusionSoft, Constant Contact, and more. It also includes an opt-in locker and social locker.

20.Simple Side Tab

Simple Side Tab offers quick and easy way to add a global call to action to your website. This plugin adds a vertical tab to either the left or right side of your site, and allows it to link to any page. The tab remains in place as the user scrolls, so it’s always visible.

21.PopupAlly

PopupAlly allows you to create popup forms with exit intent, forms with a timed delay, or embed your subscription form below your content. You can choose between a free version and a premium version, priced at $97. The free version works with a number of platforms include GetResponse, InfusionSoft, iContact, MailChimp, and AWeber. The pro version adds more features, such as additional types of calls to action and analytics information.

Plugins Aren’t Going to Do It All – Photos and Placement Matter

CTA plugins can help, but they’re not going to do all the work for you. For optimal conversion rate, it’s important to use high-resolution photos and ensure they’re placed in the proper areas on your website. Grow & Convert estimates conversion rates for these common locations:

  • Sidebar: 0.5 – 1.5%
  • Generic: end-of-post: 0.5 – 1.5%
  • Pop-ups: 1 – 8%
  • Sliders and bars: 1 – 5%
  • Welcome gates: 10 – 25%
  • Featurebox: 3 – 9%
  • Navbar: Variable

Making changes to ensure your CTAs are relevant and well placed appropriately throughout can increase conversions and sales, along with average order value.

As long as you’re careful not to overload your WordPress install with too many plugins, there are many photography plugins available to help optimize your images, too.

When split-testing, change a single element at a time, so you can get a better idea of what affected the conversion rate. Play with things like colors, placement, and copy. With the help of CTA plugins, you’ll find better on-page optimization, and see growth in your business.

Read More at 21 CTA Based Plugins for Better On-Page Optimization

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Poll: When will you start using CSS Grid Layout?

January 6th, 2017 No comments

January is the time most of us cease reflecting on the year gone by, and start looking to the months ahead. It seems everyone has different ideas on what to expect in 2017 (you’ll read ours next week) and one of the most anticipated changes this year, is the introduction of CSS Grid Layout.

Grid Layout allows us to define areas of a page, and determine how they stretch, scale, and respond to the viewport. Developed as a mature layout solution for the web, it delivers an unprecedented level of control in CSS, but if you thought Flexbox was a steep learning curve, you’ve seen nothing yet.

One of the reasons no one uses CSS Grid Layout right now is that it offers very limited support; currently, only IE10+ and Edge 12+ [doffs cap in Microsoft’s direction] offer any support at all. However that’s all about to change with full support across all major browsers expected to arrive around March.

layout is not really a progressive enhancement

Unfortunately, layout is not really a progressive enhancement. Layout determines many things, not least visual hierarchy, which can be instrumental in conveying meaning. And so, as exciting as Grid Layout is, the new design freedoms that it delivers seem hamstrung for now. The question is, when will CSS Grid Layout be reliable enough to be your default approach to layout online?

Probably the most pragmatic answer is: it depends on your target demographic. If you’re building a site for an online CSS conference sponsored by a browser manufacturer, you’re probably good to go; for every other purpose, the point at which CSS Grid Layout is commercially useful, may be a little hazier.

CSS Grid Layout is certainly coming soon, to a browser near you. It opens up new possibilities for layout. However, whether it’s usable outside of CodePen anytime soon, is another matter entirely.

180 Templates for Instagram, Facebook and Twitter – only $19!

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