General guidelines for Imagery/Graphics in Web Design

Use imagery to add meaning: either to the brand, or to the content.

Try to be as economical as possible, and get more meaning from fewer graphics. Imagery that has meaning (Primary imagery) should be the focus of a page design.

Concentrate primary imagery in the following areas:

Where other graphics are used, they should support the primary imagery, by helping the eye move over lower-priority elements. This does not mean that non-primary areas can not be rich and subtle, but they shouldn't be attractive, in the literal sense. Flat colours, subtle contrast, gentle gradients, smooth curves, and fresh white space can help the user focus, and look great.

Remember the site's goals and the users' goals, and apply graphics in a suitable proportion.

Effective use of imagery: Firewheel design

©Firewheel design, see www.firewheeldesign.com

Firewheel's site is an excellent example of energy well spent, creating a pure, focused experience.

This screenshot is 2/3 real size, and it's still clear what's what.

Navigation is simple text - there's nothing clearer or more intuitive.

Background/Interface imagery is concise. The designers clearly knew what brand image they wanted to project, and did it simply with confidence.

What draws your eye? Initially, the Firewheel logo is attractive but simple.

Secondly, the page title "Professional-grade.." stands out because of its boldness, colour and clarity.

You are then drawn to the other imagery on the page, all of which carries value, reinforcing the company's credentials, giving the user good quality information on Firewheel's products and services, as well as looking good!

The page is also relatively quick to download.

Problematic use of imagery: Yaxay

Screenshot from Yaxay.com

Yaxay.com is a popular (and highly recommended) community site for designers.

Its pages are graphically intense, which is typical of the design target sector. Most sites aimed at a web-designer audience employ very rich graphics, in order to demonstrate a level of graphic design skill to pass a supposed level of respectability.

The downside is that the content of this site definitely comes second to the background/interface. It doesn't prioritise the user's goals, and I think the user experience is compromised.

I go on Yaxay nearly every day, but find it quite a tiring experience, compared to an energisingly fresh design (like Firewheel.com).

Specific issues:

  • Heavy use of obscure icons increases clutter and reduces content clarity
  • Sheer amount of contrasting, busy, contrasting shapes pulls the eye all over the place
  • The content area has less contrast than the interface, which makes it harder to look at
  • The content text is unnecessarily small, which makes it harder to read

It is quite possible that the designers of Yaxay were clear on their goals, and had decided that graphical richness was the right approach in order to hit a goal of gaining respect from their target audience. If so, they succeeded - it would be hard to criticise their graphic design ability. The initial experience of the brand is "skilled, rich, modern"..

However, I think they failed to prioritise the user's goals highly enough. Sites that fail to serve the user's goals will tend to fail.

Navigation

Clarity is more important than attractiveness for navigation (and other functional controls). Controls should be easy to identify, and their purpose should be obvious. The easiest way to achieve both of these qualities is to use established conventions.

Don't reinvent functional controls

You're more likely to reduce usability by spending on designing functional and iterface controls. It's very difficult to create effective icons, and time-consuming for little impact.

Beware icons

Icons are incredibly powerful, when they work! A good icon is a compact visual shorthand that represents a complex idea in the minimum space. A good icon doesn't need decoding - its meaning is so unambiguous or familiar, e.g. Printer means "Click here to print", or an exclamation mark in a yellow triangle means "Warning" or "Alert".

However, it is extremely difficult to design an effective icon, and harder still to design a consistent set. Think hard about your reasons for using an icon. If it's justified to use them, go for established 'iconic' images.

Don't try to reinvent the wheel. An image doesn't just become an icon, in any sphere of design. It has to be used over a period of time, adopted by more people, and become established in the community consciousness. (See 'The pursuit of the original').

New conventions are being established all the time, e.g. the two round-faced people, originally from MSN Messenger, are becoming global shorthand for 'buddies' or 'contacts'.


Do you love our approach to crafting simple & effective web sites that just work for people?

We'd love to hear about your web strategy. Contact one of our team today!

Search this site
Pro Tips
Learn how to make fantastic web site designs..
Buy "Save the Pixel" now!
On “Save the Pixel”
Clicss templates, great robust useful CSS templates from £40
Share this Article
Send to a friend now&hellip
Follow Ben Hunt on Twitter
Floor 3
111 Buckingham Palace Road
London
SW1W 0WQ
UK
Phone
+44 (0)207 1600 989

Articles + tutorials in Graphic Design for the Web

Web Design index
List of articles and tutorials in Web Design section
Current Style in web design
My summary of the crucial advances in web design in recent years, why today's web sites are better than they were 10 years ago.
Web2.0 Design Style Guide
A guide to the Web2.0 web look, why each feature is effective, and tips on applying the Web20 style to your web sites.
White on White Web Design Style
An overview of my current super-clean design style that really lets the content stand out.
The 10 best-designed web sites in the world
My personal list of 10 favourite sites, and why.
8 Clean web site designs for inspiration
I love collecting links to sites that inspire me to push my own design further, and I thought I'd share my favourites to help inspire you too. The first set perfectly illustrates the core principles of pixel-saving in minimal, clean layouts that focus on the content.
8 Rich web site designs for inspiration
This bunch of sites are all graphcally intense, using a lot of pixels to create a rich experience that doesn't get in the way of successful communication.
9 Functional web site designs for inspiration
A varied group of excellent home page designs that are quite different, but manage to combine brand & functionality effectively on first view.
Clarity in web page design
Making a clear web page depends on making the most important elements appear important, less important stuff less important, related stuff look related, and different stuff look different.
Colour
General guidelines on how to use colour in web pages.
Contrast
The importance of tonal contrast in graphic design for the web
Effective text
Explores the strengths of using HTML text rather than words as graphics in web design
Imagery
How to use imagery to best effect
Attention Map
A low-fi tool for planning page layout, helping you plan what your page should do before you get your hands dirty
Content
Tips on creating effective content for your web pages
Zoom Your Content
Knowing how to size your content appropriately is a fundamental and critical basic skill. All is explained in this article.
Layout for web page design
Overview of the major graphic design devices
Containment
Containment is a layout tool that says visually This thing is part of that
Alignment
Using alignment in visual design for the web to associate related elements
Grouping
Associating elements through relative positioning in space
Rhythm and repetition
A further technique for associating elements is through repeating common styling
3D Effects in graphic design for the web
Guidelines on how to use 3D effects effectively in graphic design for the web
Branding
Tips for branding on the web
Logo design
The four attributes of an effective logo: shape, presence, weight, and contrast
Some Great Web Logos for Inspiration
Sharing my personal collection of almost 50 favourite logos gathered from round the web, with notes on what works & why.
Favourite logos
An older collection of my favourite logos from around the web, with analysis of why I think they work.
Real Web2.0 Design & Branding
Web 2.0 design is not the same as star flashes and shiny table effects - it's about simple, bold, honest brand experiences.
Case study: Artorg
Tweaking the layout to ehance the user experience of a nice community site for graphic artists
Case study: Business Improvement Network
Applies a totally new look and feel to the web site of a business networking organisation
Case study: Kemik's portfolio
Simplifying and enhancing an already attractive artist's portfolio to make it more engaging.
Case study: FairSay home page
A web doctor report for non-profit organisation's home page.
Case study: Media Volunteer
Simplifying and brightening the entry point for a charity application