Archive for September, 2010

Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)

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Clients can be tough… real tough. Working side by side with some clients can be an agonizing experience — an experience so painful that you often wonder what exactly you have gotten yourself into. On the other hand, some clients are an absolute dream to work with. Every day spent working with them reminds you why you became a Web designer and just how enjoyable your job actually is. The question then is, how do we take our most difficult clients and turn them into dream clients? The answer may be easier than you realize.

Clients often require a bit of hand-holding. When dealt with correctly, this is not too overwhelming; it just calls for some simple guidance. You may be surprised by how a few extra emails here and there can make a world of difference. Outlined here are some of the most common client difficulties our Twitter followers have run into and how to best resolve them.

Also consider our previous articles:

[Offtopic: by the way, did you know that there is a Smashing eBook Series? Book #2 is Successful Freelancing for Web Designers, 260 pages for just $9,90.]

Common Client Difficulties

Doesn’t Know What They Want

Tweet-1 in Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)
“They have no idea what they want!� (@daveom)

More often than none, clients have no idea what they want and look to you for your expertise. For a designer, it can be annoying. Then again, how many times have you been to a restaurant and had no idea what to order and asked for a recommendation? Clients are no different. They are looking for recommendations, not fixed solutions. Talk it over with them, get all the details, and then start making educated recommendations. As ideas start to bounce around, one will hit home and provide a base from which to work.

It takes a great deal of patience, but getting all of the necessary information and building a solid starting point will not only help you throughout the project, but also reassure the client that they made the right decision.

Feels Left Out of Process

Tweet-2 in Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)
“They never feel ‘in the loop’ — so to solve this, I try to call them each week for an update and a chat.â€� (@jaaved)

Communication is the foundation of any successful client relationship. When this foundation starts to slip, the relationship begins to crumble. Starting a project on the same page as the client is easy, but staying on the same page throughout the project requires tenacity.

At the beginning of each project, create a calendar outlining a timeline of events for the project. The calendar should explain when the client can expect certain tasks to be completed and when they will need to provide certain information. A calendar is just the start to keeping the client in the loop; it should be followed up with regular emails and phone calls. If you are making a change that will take up to a day or two, send a quick email to let the client know. A quick email takes only a minute to send, and it assures the client that you are indeed working. Simple and small efforts such as these keep the client happy and informed of the entire process.

Changes Mind Midway

Tweet-3 in Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)
“Clients agreeing to the brief and all suggestions, and then changing their mind when they actually see it built.� (@hawkpie)

It’s bound to happen sooner or later: you start a project, things are going well, and then the client gets a new idea. They request that you scrap what you’ve done so far and move in another direction. All of your hard work and effort, which the client originally wanted, is wasted — or so you suspect.

In reality, merging what the client originally wanted with the new direction may be completely possible. Keep an open line of communication and work out the reasoning behind the new direction. What they want might not be far off from what you’re actually doing, and mixing in a few new details may not be too difficult.

The initial shock of a request for a new direction is often worse than it seems. Keep a good attitude, and work it out with the client professionally. If the client refuses to meet you in the middle, you should have a solid contract to back up the project, and bill them for the extra work accordingly.

Doesn’t Understand Web Design

Tweet-4 in Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)
“General lack of knowledge.� (@robbclarke)

When I take my car into the shop for a repair, the mechanic knows to speak to me in terms I will understand. If they go into detail about how my carburetor is not getting the right fuel-to-oxygen intake ratio of 14.7:1, then I look at them as though they are speaking a foreign language. The same is true with our clients. If I explain to them that the layout is based on a 12-column 960-pixel-wide grid, in which everything in the left column needs to stay within 220 pixels, then they would look at me as though I was speaking a foreign language as well.

Our job as Web designers is to educate our clients. That is neither easy nor glamorous, but working with an educated client is much more pleasurable. When a client fully understands what you are doing and why you are doing it, then they are much more welcoming of your changes, and they’ll often even offer quality suggestions. Remember, what is obvious to you may not be obvious to them, so be as accommodating as possible.

Doesn’t Provide Enough Information

Tweet-5 in Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)
“Asking specific questions and getting vague replies, then clients thinking you’re slow in some way when you ask again.� (@Shellra)

Client requests are not uncommon. If a client is not a fan of a blue button, they will tell you so. Being such a polite designer, you change the color of the button. But upon changing it, the client mentions that what they really meant is that they want the button to stand out more. Again, being the polite designer, you make it stand out more. Following this change, the client says that you are getting closer to what they want but that they would like to see the button in blue. Not so politely anymore, you want to know what the problem is. Your button was blue to begin with — what really is the problem?

This type of situation happens all too frequently and is extremely frustrating. The client thinks you are senseless for not understanding what they want, and you think the client is ignorant for not giving you all the necessary details. The quarrel could go on for ages, and no one would win.

When a client provides insufficient detail, go back to them and explain in great detail that you are not too sure what they are looking for. Explain that the more information they give and the better they describe what they’re looking for, then the better you can deliver what they want. Ask for an example or approximation of what they’re looking for. Make sure they understand that the more guidance you get, the better. If you feel you are not getting the details you need, don’t be afraid to jump on the phone with them to hash out the details. Playing the guessing game is the quickest way to burn out. Avoid it at all costs.

Expectations Are Too High

Tweet-6 in Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)
“How about expecting the earth on a shoestring budget and wanting it by 5:30 pm.� (@fruitymilk)

One of the most difficult parts of being a Web designer is managing client expectations. Clients will often come with a list of requests that they presume is not all that difficult to achieve… and that they expect will turn their website into the next best social network. On top of a laundry list of demands, the client also informs you that they are working on a very limited budget and short timeframe. To them, you “do this kind of thing all the time,� and so doing it for them should be a walk in the park. Sadly, they are wrong, and no one but us is at fault.

Christina Krasovich puts it best: “If you don’t manage client expectations, you will never exceed client expectations.� If we do not regularly communicate with our clients about what we are doing and what is feasible, then no wonder they think we have the power to move oceans. Continually keep them informed of the project’s progress, and discuss complications as they arise. A client who is kept in the dark will not know how difficult anything is to accomplish. They will be dumbfounded when you balk at a request.

When negotiating a new project, explain to the client the difficulty of what they are requesting. Let them know that the task they would like to be performed requires time and money to complete. Correctly managing expectations keeps the client at bay. Exceeding expectations will have them praising you.

Struggles to Pay on Time

Tweet-7 in Turning All Clients Into Dream Clients (or Common Client Difficulties)
“Paying on time is my biggest difficulty with clients, especially with larger companies.� (@thefunkhouse)

Staying afloat is extremely difficult when a client struggles to pay on time. Even one late payment is enough to cause a great deal of suffering. But as in any industry, when you take on a job, you run the risk of not being paid in full. You never expect not to be paid, of course, but you can take certain steps to soften the blow when a client struggles to pay.

To begin, keep your expenses as low as possible. Do you really need an account for stock photography, or are enough free resources online for you to work for the time being? Just because your income is at a certain level does not mean you need to spend it all. Save your money for operational costs the next time a client pays late.

Also, write a solid contract, and request a decent deposit before starting. If a client is sluggish about making a deposit, this may be a strong indication of things to come: proceed with caution. In the contract, clearly state when payment is due and what are the penalties should the client pay late. Review this part of the contract with the client before signing it, making sure they are fully aware of the penalty.

Be open and honest with the client about payment. Stay on top of them, pleasantly reminding them when their invoice is coming up and when payment is due.

One Day At A Time

At the end of the day, the very least you can do is treat your client with respect and hope they treat you in turn. All of the communication and assistance in the world will not mean a thing if it is done with contempt.

Some clients will be rougher than others, and that’s fine. Keep your head up, and don’t give in. Continue to work with them, educating them, making compromises and working together. When you and a client are happy with each other, the opportunities are endless. Before shrugging off the next client who throws a fit, take a different approach. With a little extra effort, you never know — they may just end up being the client of your dreams.

Additional Resources (And Laughs)

(al)


© Shay Howe for Smashing Magazine, 2010. | Permalink | Post a comment | Add to del.icio.us | Digg this | Stumble on StumbleUpon! | Tweet it! | Submit to Reddit | Forum Smashing Magazine
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Does The Future Of The Internet Have Room For Web Designers?

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Update (27.09.2010): this article caused quite a heated debate in the design community. Please read the rebuttal of this article, called I Want To Be A Web Designer When I Grow Up here, at Smashing Magazine.

— Vitaly Friedman, editor-in-chief of Smashing Magazine

It seems that new posts about what the Internet has in store for us down the road pop up every week or two. Some propose that the Internet will deliver more of the same, but different somehow (it’s usually ambiguous just how), while others propose such radical changes that it’s hard to believe they could ever happen. And the truth is, none of us really know what will happen with the Internet in 10 or 15 years.

After all, it was only a little more than 15 years ago that Clifford Stoll wrote the now-infamous “The Internet? Bah!” post (subtitled: “Hype Alert, Why Cyberspace Isn’t, and Will Never Be, Nirvana”). In that post he detailed why a lot of things just wouldn’t happen online but most of which are now commonplace.

As web designers and developers, what the future holds for the Internet is imperative for our livelihoods. If the Internet has radical changes in store for us, we need to understand how they might effect what we do to earn a living and what we’ll need to do to adapt and keep pace — if that’s even possible.

[Offtopic: by the way, did you know that we are publishing a Smashing eBook Series? The brand new eBook #3 is Mastering Photoshop For Web Design, written by our Photoshop-expert Thomas Giannattasio.]

The Future is Content and Data

Look at your mobile phone. If you’re like most tech-savvy consumers, you’ve likely got a smartphone of the Apple or Android variety (or maybe a Blackberry, especially if you’re working in the corporate world). Most of us use our smartphones on a near-constant basis doing everything from checking email to working on projects to entertaining ourselves. How much of all that do you do in your phone’s browser?

The answer is probably “not much”.

We use an app to check email. We use the Facebook app for status updates. We use Twidroid or TweetDeck or the official Twitter app for tweeting. We use a YouTube app to watch videos. We use the Pandora or Last.fm apps for streaming music.

Prism in Does The Future Of The Internet Have Room For Web Designers?
Mozilla Prism is an application that lets users split web applications out of their browser and run them directly on their desktop. Is this the future of mobile applications?

It’s likely a similar scenario on our desktop or laptop computer. We use apps for a lot of our common Internet-based activities. We even have options to create our own apps with single-site browsers (like Fluid or Prism). And Google’s Chrome OS is just around the corner with devices already planned to use the web-based OS.

Content is king and design is becoming less relevant – we’re already seeing this with mobile themes

Look at how many WordPress sites use one of less than a handful of standard mobile themes. It doesn’t matter what the site looks like in a standard browser; open it up in your mobile browser and you’re often greeted with a page that looks exactly like the last 10 sites you visited.

This is because for most users, design is irrelevant. That’s not to say they don’t appreciate good design. Many of them do (and many of them don’t). But they’re on a website because of the content. They don’t care about visual design, and they don’t care about interaction designer that much, either: as long as the design doesn’t give them a headache or interfere with their ability to find what they want, they don’t really care how exactly it looks like or how exactly it is working. The most widely-used mobile themes offer the content in an optimized format for mobile viewing. That makes users happy.

It is not just apps that reduce the need to visit a website

It’s not just apps that will pull data directly, without the need for an actual website. Devices are making real headway in this manner. We have cars now that can pull information from the Internet for you. Soon devices for Google TV will be out in the marketplace, pulling video content from the Internet without the need to visit a website.

Googletv in Does The Future Of The Internet Have Room For Web Designers?
Soon devices for Google TV will be out in the marketplace, pulling video content from the Internet without the need to visit a website.

It’s likely that more devices will add Internet integration in the near future. At some point we’ll probably have refrigerators that automatically generate shopping lists for us (including any available coupons and where the best prices can be found that week): based on previous shopping habits; what we currently have; and our average usage rates for different foods. This is just one example of how online data and content will become infinitely more important than the designs surrounding that content.

Content Will Be Funneled Through a Handful of Sources

It’s impractical to have apps for every website we visit. Most of us visit hundreds or thousands of websites every year. What’s more likely to happen is that most of our content will be delivered through aggregators.

Who will these aggregators be?

Currently, there are three big players on the Internet that are likely to continue to be the primary content delivery platforms. Who are they? Twitter, Facebook and Google. Think about where you spend most of your time online and you’re likely going to find that those are the sites you visit most often. This market share is only going to increase.

Facebook is already trying to be the Internet

Look at how much content is now aggregated through Facebook. They have pages for virtually every topic under the sun (most of which have canned content taken directly from Wikipedia). Post a YouTube video to Facebook and your friends can watch it right there, without ever leaving Facebook. Even third-party applications like Networked Blogs stick pretty closely to the Facebook environment.

Facebookapps in Does The Future Of The Internet Have Room For Web Designers?
Post a YouTube video to Facebook and your friends can watch it right there, without ever leaving Facebook. Even third-party applications like Networked Blogs stick pretty closely to the Facebook environment.

Besides that, look at the gaming environment that’s cropped up on Facebook. I’ve lost track of how many updates in my news feed are directly related to games like Farmville or Mafia Wars. Facebook has grown into such a complete online ecosystem that many users might never find a reason to leave. Facebook shows no signs of slowing down either. They’re expanding their business and their reach – a trend that’s likely to continue for as long as they can sustain it.

Google wants everything to go through them

Google already has its hands in virtually everything online. It has two operating systems (Chrome OS and Android), its own browser, web applications that allow you to do a lot of things that used to be limited to desktop applications and the most-used search engine in the world put it in a pretty solid position to continue to be a major stakeholder in the future Internet.

Google is also one of the more forward thinking and active participants in Internet policy and technology. It has a vested interest in how the Internet shapes up in coming years and will push to shape that Internet in a way that benefits its business model. I can see a future where Google doesn’t just offer a list of search engine results, but actually shows you the content you’re looking for without ever leaving their sites.

Googleapps in Does The Future Of The Internet Have Room For Web Designers?

If you look at Google’s complete product offering, it’s easy to see that it wants to be the primary online destination for most people (or maybe even all people). Google is firmly positioned in blogging, video, search, business applications, webmaster tools, ecommerce and even phone services – expect its reach to expand even more.

Is there room for other services?

There are always going to be innovative startups online. Most will fall by the wayside soon after they’re started or are absorbed into other established companies. A select few will go on to become major influencers online. It’s unclear at the moment where there’s room for new companies and services online. The idea of more location-based services (going beyond FourSquare, et al) is probably the most promising as well as services that go beyond normal Internet activities and integrate into daily life more.

Function Will Prevail over Form

If everyone is accessing web content through an app rather than a browser, then no one will care what a website looks like. The way it functions and the content it delivers will become the paramount concerns to users. There will be no more balancing of form and function on a website; function will override form.

Form will retain a place in the design of apps. In all likelihood, content will be open to the extent that APIs will be developed that anyone can then use in application development – so the form in which an app displays that data will become what separates the good from the bad, the great from the mediocre.

There are Advantages…

There are some big advantages to this kind of model where apps and a small number of content aggregators deliver and control most of the content online. One issue is bandwidth. If there’s no design being transferred to a device (because the application on the device already includes all the design elements), that saves bandwidth. As more and more activities are done online, we’re going to have to consider infrastructure costs. Lower bandwidth use per site will result in more bandwidth available.

Another advantage is that there’s more potential for user control. Users can define their preferences on their device and see content in the way they want. This especially has positive implications when it comes to accessibility. Those who need special settings because of a disability will no longer have issues with unviewable content.

Technical advantages

Let’s face it: the technologies upon which the Internet is built aren’t the most efficient ones available. Part of this has to do with building upon infrastructure that isn’t as good as it could be. The Internet has to be backwards-compatible over very long periods of time. We can’t just suddenly change things, even if it is to make things work better in the future, if it causes half the sites out there to no longer function.

With a content-based Internet that uses device-side applications for displaying data and performing tasks, we can create more efficient applications. We won’t need to make sure each application can handle a huge variety of content and processes (as browsers currently have to do), because we’ll know exactly the kinds of data that application will need to process.

What Does It Mean for Users?

Practically, users will have a more integrated experience with the content they view and the services they use online. The Internet will become even more a part of everyday life, incorporated to such an extent that it’s seamless. It’s already happening in bits and pieces.

Again, look at your phone. You probably use apps or widgets for things like checking the weather or generating a shopping list. These apps will become more integrated and will work better with the data available online. For example, you could use that shopping list to automatically find the best prices on products, either online or at your local stores. In all likelihood, that data would be aggregated through a service like Google Base.

One profile fits all

An online profile will become even more important for users. Rather than setting up every device or service you have, you’ll simply authorize the device to grab your profile and preference information from the web. Security and privacy experts will have a field day with this, but most consumers will opt to use it anyway if it means the difference between going through a two-hour manual setup process or clicking a button and authorizing it to set everything up automatically.

What Does It Mean for the Web Design Industry?

So what does this all boil down to? If the web becomes app-based and content-based, where do web designers fit in — if at all? The bad news is that if the Internet starts relying much more heavily on access via app rather than browser, there’s going to be a lot less demand for web designers. Companies won’t see the point in hiring someone to create an entirely bespoke website when they can just use a template and then feed all their content to Google and Facebook and Twitter.

Developers, on the other hand, will likely see a boom in business. A lot of money will be exchanging hands for apps that work better than current offerings and apps that might be able to undermine the big players. Of course, all these apps also need design work, but it will be a lot less demand than there is now for website design. It’s likely a lot of designers will need to expand their offerings to cater to content creation rather than just web design.

Websites aren’t going to go away any time soon. It’s likely that there will be a bigger market for templates and themes as companies stop paying for custom designs. And there will be certain kinds of sites (like portfolios or art projects) that will always want to be designed.

Multimedia content will also still have a strong market. Those who can produce high-quality videos and even web-based apps (for things like Chrome OS) will have a strong business for years to come.

Who Wins in All This?

If there’s a definite winner in this possible future Internet, it is the content creators. If the only thing that sets one company or organization apart from their competition, then those who can create high-quality content will be in high demand. The thousands of dollars that a company used to be spent on website design will be funneled into website content instead.

Users will also benefit as they’ll have a more integrated, customized experience. Their version of the Internet will be tailored specifically to them, based on their own wants and needs. They’ll get content in the manner they prefer and find most usable.

Application developers will also likely win in all this. While the APIs and the data available will be pretty standardized, the manner in which it’s displayed will become a battleground of creativity. Innovation here will be key, doing something different and better than what everyone else is doing is the only way an app will stand out.

Update

Update (26.09.2010): We’ve got quite many negative responses for this article, like Web Designers Won’t Die Out, They Will Transition. At Smashing Magazine, we are aiming for strong, high quality articles and after reading the article we do think that it raises some valid points, and now in retrospect we understand why the title and the content may appear to be aggressive. We also can see where the accusation of trying to be sensationalist comes from. But it was never the intention of the article.

We are trying to do our best to provide only relevant and high qualilty content, but apparently sometimes we see our things differently than our readers do. We do appreciate constructive criticism like the above post on Drawar. And we are listening to what you are saying. And we will certainly keep it in mind for our future articles.

Update (27.09.2010): this article caused quite a heated debate in the design community. Please read the rebuttal of this article, called I Want To Be A Web Designer When I Grow Up here, at Smashing Magazine.

— Vitaly Friedman, editor-in-chief of Smashing Magazine

(afb)


© Cameron Chapman for Smashing Magazine, 2010. | Permalink | Post a comment | Add to del.icio.us | Digg this | Stumble on StumbleUpon! | Tweet it! | Submit to Reddit | Forum Smashing Magazine
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Designing Usable Shopping Carts

Grocery shopping, technology shopping, or shopping for living space, it can all be done online, and it is ever increasing in popularity. We all know that you can purchase a genre of items from the internet with new items being available for online purchase every day.

With that said, one of the greatest pet peeves of any online shopper is the difficulty to know what you currently have in your basket or to find the checkout link. Therefore, designing a usable shopping cart is all about usability and simplicity, as your customers need to be able to connect their shopping cart with the items they are obtaining.

Think of online shopping as grocery shopping. Before you walk into the grocery store you generally pick out a shopping cart or basket and make your way through the aisles, and on this shopping trip, you need 12 items.

You easily cruise through the grocery store and pick up the items you need and drop them in your cart or basket. Imagine not having the cart or basket with you or available as an option, you would have no place to put your groceries in which ultimately leads to you shopping less as your carrying capacity decreases dramatically.

This same principle applies to e-commerce. If you are shopping cart is difficult to find or is not really connected with the shopping or browsing experience, your customers will shop or browse less, which leads to less purchases. Therefore, never underestimate the design and layout of your online shopping cart or e-commerce website.

With that all said, we take a look at eight tips on designing usable shopping carts that your customers will appreciate and use more, increasing shopping length.

Mini Me

Online shoppers hate to have to go to a specific area to view their basket or cart to see what items are in it or not. This is like having your grocery basket in one corner of the grocery store and having to frequent back to it to drop in items or check what you already have; it is an inconvenience.

Therefore, creating a mini cart or a cart icon in the header of your website that displays the number of items in their basket that additionally links to the main cart helps customers and visitors feel connected with their basket, improving their shopping experience. With that all said, this mini cart should be disabled across the website where potential shopping can be done.

Simple Checkout Page

Having to fill out a checkout page every single time you make a purchase becomes tedious, however, a needed step. In order to break the step down to a quicker and easier less frustrating experience you need to simplify the checkout process with the following few tips.

Navigational Checkout

With just a continue button at the end of each form, your customers will not know when they will be done with filling out the information which could lead to cancelled orders. With that said, providing a systematic navigation will allow your customers to know where they are exactly in the checkout process, and how much longer they need until they finish. This method sometimes encourages customers to not cancel their order, and rather continue and finish the checkout process.

Remember User Information

Let us face it, we do not change addresses or locations as frequent as we do shop, and asking for the same address for every purchase they make is a tedious process especially for weekly or daily shoppers. With that said, instead of prompting your customers or users for the same information per order, provide them the option to store the information so at a later date, a click of a button can complete their purchase.

Make Things Obvious

One of the things any online shopper hates is having to search for buttons and required selection options. For example, I have used many shopping carts where I am in checkout, and I cannot locate the complete order button or I cannot find the shipping options to choose a suitable option over the “recommended” option.

Not being able to finalize a purchase because your customers cannot find the shipping options or complete order button is not a good sign. Therefore, make them obvious and visible to capture all potential sales and to help prevent loss of customers.

Keep Shopping

Most of online shoppers are not necessarily tech savvy, which means they become paranoid about what to do in certain situations. One of these situations is being in the basket after adding an item to it and no link to go back to the products list. Many online shoppers may assume that leaving the basket by clicking on a link in the navigation will clear their basket, which causes confusion and frustration in many cases.

Therefore, by providing a continue shopping link in the basket somewhere near the proceed to checkout link will keep your shopping cart usable and user friendly.

Registration before Checkout

Many websites will not allow their new potential customers to add products to their basket before registering to the service or site. This is something you want to stay away from at any given point in time as your users or potential customers can go elsewhere to purchase similar products. With that said, leave the registration process for the checkout process where it is more suitable.

Zero is the Magic Number

No, no it is not. Designing and or developing a usable shopping cart is all about usability and the ease to get there. Multiple shopping carts out there do not have a remove item from basket feature but instead confuse their users with just an update button and a quantity field.

This leaves a user guessing to enter zero in the quantity field to remove the item, or having them read a manual on how to use your shopping cart system, which they will most likely not read. Remember, using a shopping cart system should be as easy as putting items on a conveyer belt at checkout at your local grocery store, and not a challenge with a manual on how to fly a plane, if you get my drift.


40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

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Today, when most designers have switched to the workflow with multiple displays, the popularity of multiple screen wallpapers has tremendously increased. Keeping this in mind, we are presenting 40 eye-catchy triple screen wallpapers for your desktop. We have carefully picked the wallpapers from different genres to help you set your mood right on your displays.


Triple Screen Wallpapers

The Red Arrows
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Yellow Stones
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Tuscan Sunset
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Perfect Figure
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Stanley View, Tasmania
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Sunshine
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Summertime
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Sunset in Tuscany
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Calton Hill, Edinburgh
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Hardware
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The Streets
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-streets in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Pier to Nowhere
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-nowhere in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Spin Around the Block
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-spin in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Drops
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-drops in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Theaterplatz Dresden
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-theater in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Twisted
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-twisted in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Cotonwood Road
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-cotonwoodrd in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Sugar Lake Rainbow
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-sugarlakerainbow in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Lake Chapala, Jalisco, Mexico
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-lakechapalajaliscomexico in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Hands
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-hands in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Santa Cruz Sunset
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-santacruzsunset in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

A Lone Man in Jungle
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-jungle in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Andromeda Rising X3
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-andromeda in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Shiny Sky
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-shinysky in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Springdale
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-springdale in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Fragile Elegance
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-fragileelegance in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Prairie Dog Watching
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-watching in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Ubber Stitch
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-ubber in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Colonnade
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-colonnade in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

St. Peter Pier
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-peter in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Urban Art, Docklands
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-12 in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Broken Hill Sculptures
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-broken-hill in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Noosa Surf Girls
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-surf-girls in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers

Luna Park and Bridge, Sydney
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40-mesmeric-triple-screen-wallpapers-lunapark in 40 Beautiful Triple Screen Wallpapers


Creative Icon Tutorials for Photoshop

For today’s news round-up we take a look at whats new and cool in the world of icon design tutorials. We have picked four such tutorials which we feel are that good that we simply had to share them with our readers.

How To Create a Detailed Briefcase Icon

How To Create a Detailed Briefcase Icon

Follow this step by step guide to create a detailed briefcase icon, building the rough outline with basic shapes, then adding depth and definition with various Photoshop layer styles such as Inner Glow and Stroke. And finally bringing the icon to life by using real photographic textures to give a tactile leather feel to the icon.
How To Create a Detailed Briefcase Icon

Draw a Trophy Icon in Photoshop

Draw a Trophy Icon in Photoshop

Draw a Trophy Icon in Photoshop

Shiny Lock Icon Photoshop Tutorial

Shiny Lock Icon Photoshop Tutorial

Shiny Lock Icon Photoshop Tutorial

How to Create a Beautiful Guitar Icon

How to Create a Beautiful Guitar Icon

Learn how to start from scratch and draw your own guitar icon in Photoshop. This tutorial will show you how to create your own wood texture and create a guitar using the basic tools in Photoshop.
How to Create a Beautiful Guitar Icon

By Paul Andrew (Speckyboyand speckyboy@twitter).


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