Archive for December, 2010

Authentic Jobs jobs in Europe. London, to be more specific.

For anyone looking for a new job there sure are a lot of interesting listings at Authentic Jobs. However the overwhelming majority of those jobs are in the US, which isn’t very exciting for us here in Europe.

There are currently a few listings for jobs in Europe though. Coincidentally they are all in London, UK:

So if you’re looking for a web designer or developer job in the UK those are a few tips.

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How to create a 3-column layout with CSS

One of the most visited pages on this site is the Simple 2 column CSS layout tutorial, where I explain how to create a basic 2-column CSS layout with floats. Many readers have asked for a similar tutorial on how to create a three-column layout, and I’ve been meaning to write one for a few years.

Well, I finally took the time to do it. Three-column CSS layouts have been explained many times, in many different ways, by many people already, so there is nothing (or at least not much) new here. It’s also something that I’m pretty sure that most regular readers can do in their sleep. Regardless, there are many people looking for this info, and it’s convenient to be able to refer to an explanation of how I normally create 3-column CSS layouts with a method that I find robust.

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HTML5 + CSS3 Title Sequence for WDS10

A Blue Perspective: <p>

See the WDS10 Title Sequence

There's nothing that has quite the ability to sharpen one's creative process like a ridiculous deadline. In this case a 72-hour deadline to complete the opening titles for the Web Directions South conference -- all the way from creative brainstorming to seeing it on-screen in front of 600 people.

Because of the nature of the conference and the talk I gave on browser animation the previous Friday, I decided not to take the easy option (by doing it in After Effects) and instead opted for the much more perilous path of HTML5 & CSS3. 2458 lines of JavaScript and 841 lines of CSS later, I had a title sequence I was pretty happy with.

Although I don't encourage you to look at the code, I'm sure some people will. Timeline animation code is never the prettiest (because it has to be so sequential) and three late nights of frantic coding make it doubly so, but here are a few clues that might help you navigate the morass of functions and variables.

  • There's no magic used to synchronise visuals with audio -- I manually went through and timecoded the specific spots in the song I wanted to sync with, then got the JavaScript to trigger animation at those points.
  • Although HTML5 audio has a timeupdate event that fires regularly to tell you where the audio is up to, it doesn't have great accuracy (it fires about once every 300 milliseconds). So, I had to write my own tick() function which manually checks the audio's currentTime and keeps the animation synchronised with the sound.
  • I wrote this specifically for Chrome (lots of -webkit prefixes), as it seemed to have the highest frame rate and smoothest animation. Alarmingly, Safari and Chrome nightlies both exhibited really bad up-scaling and font anti-aliasing when using CSS transforms and Chrome showed some really bad animation artifacts. Hopefully these get fixed before they make it into stable builds.
  • Animating the opacity of text can be a little clunky, particularly in the last 10%. For some reason when you animate to 100% opacity the browser does weird (strong) anti-aliasing on the text just as it hits 100%; to avoid this I only animate to 90% opacity.
  • It's amazing how effective a 2 pixel high div is at emulating a line (particularly when you rotate it using CSS transforms).
  • Magic numbers produce a lot of magic.

For me, the code is kind of redundant -- it was just what was necessary to produce what I saw in my head. The great thing about it is that it didn't provide much of a barrier to doing so; there were relatively few spots where I had to compromise my creative vision for what was possible with the tools I had chosen.

Thanks to Maxine and John for providing the giant screen space which inspired this piece, and thanks also for the "sharpened creative process" which helped drive me :P

The music used is Hans Zimmer - Time (We Plants Are Happy Plants Remix)


Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips

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 in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips  in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips  in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips

Compositing is a skill and process that spans the entire spectrum of creative industries. At the high end, compositing boasts its own specialized profession in film and television post production and visual effects. Dedicated software such as NUKE and Shake have taken the craft to powerful levels of its own, leaving behind the relatively basic compositing toolset of Adobe Photoshop. However, for many graphics practitioners compositing is a vital everyday process — and as with all pixel-pushing endeavors, Photoshop remains the entry point and hub to learning and ultimately mastering the fundamentals of this important skill.

In this article, I’ll share some of my own time-saving tips for compositing in Photoshop. Tips such as these should never replace a solid understanding of your craft; however, being able to adapt a technique to make it work for you is part of being a creative professional. I encourage you to share your own creative compositing tips in the comments to this article, and think about how you have adapted existing techniques to work for you.

Tip 1: Matching Tones, Channel by Channel

One of the challenges we face when compositing is matching the colors and tones of various images to produce a realistic and convincing composite. This method aims to save you from spending time fiddling around with color balances and layers upon layers of adjustments, by showing you a systematic approach that should become second nature and enhance your compositing skill set.

1 Images in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
These are the three images we will composite together

In the following example, we will composite three people into one shot and address the differences in lighting, tone and color balance. I use this technique most often as a way of quickly grouping my subjects into a similar tonal range for further global color adjustments.

1 Placedimages in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Masked images placed on background

In the above image, I have masked out the images and placed them together on a background. (Read on for some time-saving tips on masking.)

The key to this technique is selecting one of the images as your target, and then matching the other two images to the tone and lighting of this target. Out of the three images, I like the colors, tones and contrast in figure 1 the most, so I’ve chosen it as our target.

Throughout this article, you will see that I am using Smart Objects. This is an excellent habit to get into when starting any Photoshop workflow. Smart Objects allow us to perform non-destructive transformations on a layer, as well as non-destructive filtering.

Visual Evaluation

We are now entering the exciting world of greyscale tonal evaluation, deep inside the channels of our RGB image — the bare bones of bitmap imaging. We are going to go through each channel of the image and simply try to match the greyscale luminence levels to the target layer:

1. In the Channels palette, solo the red channel by either clicking the channel or using the keyboard shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + 3. You should see the entire image in greyscale, representing the luminance values of red.

2. Select the layer for figure 2 and add a Curves adjustment layer just above it. Make this adjustment layer a clipping mask by Alt/Opt clicking between the two layers in the layer palette. You could also select the adjustment layer and use the keyboard shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + Alt/Opt + G. Now select the red channel inside Curves.

1 RedCurves in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips

3. Now make a quick, overall visual evaluation of the two images: make a point right in the middle of your curve. If the mid-tones in your target layer (figure 1) look darker than your current layer (figure 2), move the midpoint down to darken the layer to better match your target. If the tones in the target appear lighter than your current layer, move the midpoint up to lighten the layer and better match your target. Use small increments, and continuously use your eyes to evaluate the changes.

If things don’t look quite right still, locate the lightest shade of grey (but not white, as this could be a specular highlight — not something you want to factor in much, with compositing) on the target image, and do the same with figure 2. With your eyes darting between these two greyscale shades, move the white slider on the Curves dialog box until the shades visually match. Next, do exactly the same process with the darkest part of the image, moving the black slider in the Curves dialog.

1 RedAdjustments in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Curves adjustments for the red channel

4. Swap over to the blue channel, by either clicking the channel in the Channels palette or using the keyboard shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + 4. Select the blue channel within the Curves dialog box. Perform the same adjustment, starting by creating a center point on the curve, and dragging until the mid-tones in your image match those in the target.

1 BlueCurves in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Curves adjustments for the blue channel

5. Repeat these adjustments for the green channel. Click the green channel in the Channels palette or use the keyboard shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + 5.

1 GreenAdjustments in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Curves adjustments for the green channel

6. You can now revert back to your RGB composite image by selecting the RGB channel in the Channels palette, or by using the keyboard shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + 2, and review the changes you have made. It is sometimes necessary to reduce the opacity of the adjustment layer if the change has been too drastic. Toggle the visibility of the adjustment layer to see a “before” and “after” for your adjustment. As we are using adjustment layers, our changes are non-destructive, so it is always possible to go back into the channels and curves to make further adjustments at any time.

7. Now, repeat steps 1–6 for figure 3, adjusting the curves per channel as before.

1 BeforeAfter1 in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
(From left) “before” and “after” adjustments to figure 2

1 BeforeAfter2 in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
(From left) “before” and “after” adjustments to figure 3

The registered changes make an excellent starting point to a compositing task, providing the perfect platform for further color corrections and adjustments. It is very rare that the image will be perfect at this stage, but the images will be more homogeneous and in a better relative condition to each other than before.

1 Composite in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips

As you get more comfortable with this technique, start adding additional points to your curves by sampling tones from your image using the Curves sampler tool.

Tip 2: Gradient Map with Soft Light

Although this is not essentially a compositing technique, it is an especially useful adjustment to perform on a composited image, where the colors and tones often require this type of homogeneous tweaking and subtle realignment. This technique works well as a final adjustment to an image. It has the effect of bringing all colors and tones slightly closer together, whilst still retaining their independence and relevance to the whole image.

1. Add a new Gradient Map Adjustment layer on top of all other layers. You will want to make sure that the layer thumbnail is selected, and not the layer mask thumbnail which is usually selected as default.

2. Next, turn off the visibility of the gradient map layer by deselecting either the eyeball next to the layer, or the eyeball at the bottom of the Gradient Map Adjustment panel.

2 GradientLayer in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Open a Gradient Map Adjustment layer, turning off visibility

3. Click on the gradient bar in the gradient map dialog box to open up the gradient editor. As default the gradient map is set to a black to white gradient — not particularly useful for this technique, but actually quite handy at giving us an initial idea of the direction the dark to light tones we will select, should be going in.

We are going to set ten points on the gradient bar — with colors picked directly from our image — going from darkest to lightest. First, click on the black point of the gradient and hover over the image; you should see the Eyedropper tool. Locate the very darkest point of your image and click; if it is black or very close to black, you won’t see much change in your gradient map. Now click just below the gradient bar, a small space away from the gradient point you just changed, to add a new gradient point.

Don’t worry about the distance between the points at this stage; we can change this at the end. Hover over your image again, select the next darkest area, and click. Continue with this process, adding progressively lighter points to the gradient bar all the way down to the white point, changing that to the lightest color in your image. You should aim to have ten points in total, although a few more or less is fine. Try to space out the points evenly before pressing OK.

2 GradientSamples in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Sample ten colors from your image on the gradient bar

4. Turn on the visibility of the gradient map layer once more. You will probably see a frightening rendering of your carefully composited image, and you may be wondering now what you have just gone and done. Don’t worry; this is to be expected. Change the gradient map layer’s blending mode to Soft Light and reduce the opacity until you are happy with the image once more. Check the change by toggling the adjustment layer visibility on and off.

2 BeforeComposte in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Before
2 Composte1 in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
After

Tip 3: Black & White Overlay

This is a great, quick trick for compositing that is perfect for those times when simply closing the job is a priority. The effect applies a stylized adjustment which tempers the colors in the image and increases contrast, especially useful in stylized shots such as sports imagery. The effect of the adjustment immediately makes the images more congruent, and this is what compositing is about.

1. Add a new Black & White adjustment layer above all layers you want to affect, and set the adjustment layer’s blending mode to Overlay.

3 Bw in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Add the Black & White adjustment layer

2. The great thing about the Black & White adjustment layer is the amount of control it gives you over the desaturation effect you have made. Adjust the color balances in the adjustment panel, and finally reduce the opacity of the layer to an effect you are happy with.

3 Composite in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Final image with Black & White adjustment layer (set to overlay)

Tip 4: Lighting Direction

Often, one of the most difficult aspects of compositing is dealing with the direction light is coming from. Different images may be lit with the same intensity, with the same coloring and within the same tonal range, yet if the direction of the light is different, it can be fatal to the realism of the image.

4 Images in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips

The images above will be composited into one shot with an efficient, non-destructive way of addressing light directionality.

4 Placed in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Masked images placed on background

Once masked and placed on the background, we can see that the light on the two buildings is coming from opposite directions. We could flip one of the buildings horizontally, but this is often not an option in cases where we need to preserve the original angle and direction of an image.

Painting Shadows and Highlights

We will choose the light direction we wish to maintain, out of the two, and only work on the layer which we need to change. There are a multitude of methods for painting in shadows, so my main piece of advice is: do it non-destructively. Try this method:

1. Add a new Curves adjustment layer above the layer you wish to affect. Make this adjustment layer a clipping mask by Alt/Opt clicking the line beneath the layer in the layer palette. You could also select the adjustment layer, and use the keyboard shortcut Cmd/Ctrl + Alt/Opt + G.

2. Make a point on the middle of the curve and move downwards to darken the layer. Fill the adjustment layer’s mask with black, and paint with a soft white brush into the layer mask to add shadow.

4 Shadow in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Shadow added to building

3. Reduce the opacity until you are happy with the effect. You can always paint back into the layer, or use lower-opacity brushes, to get the effect just right.

4. To neutralize the shadow which exists on the wrong side of this same building, repeat the process by adding another Curves adjustment layer and setting it as a clipping mask. Add a mid point to your curve and move the curve upward to lighten the image. Fill the adjustment layer mask with black, and paint with a white brush over the shadow you wish to remove. Reduce the opacity quite a lot, until the shadow is no longer prevalent.

Of course the composited image is still nowhere near perfect, but that change in lighting has made a difference which now lets us imagine these images could exist in the same world; that’s a great starting point for a compositing task.

4 Highlight1 in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Shadow is neutralized

Tip 5: Super-quick Previewing Using Blending Modes

Blending modes and tools offer a really powerful set of compositing features which can be used to speed up a lot of tasks. The following is a very simple trick which many people know about, but often forget.

Here is the scenario: you need to composite an image of a glass of milk on an image of a table.

5 Milk in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips5 Table in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Sourced images for compositing

You have sourced the images you think would work together, and you need to check if the glass will sit realistically on the table, if the angles will line up and if the perspective will be convincing. However, you are so squeezed for time that even a rough trace of the glass would take too long. Luckily for you, the glass of milk has a black background.

Removing Black or White

Photoshop offers ready-made blending modes for removing black and white from one layer placed on top of another. The Multiply blending mode will render white pixels transparent, while the Screen mode does the same with black pixels. Both blending modes will also affect how other tones in your layer interact with the layer below, so unless this effect is something you are going for, this technique is usually best used to preview images which are on solid black or white backgrounds. This is massively time saving, and is a great way of ensuring you are happy with the image before you commit to masking it out.

This can also help you when sourcing images for a time-sensitive task; knowing that solid black or white backgrounds can be so easily removed for previewing will help you identify the images most appropriate for your use.

5 CompositedGlass in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Preview of how the elements fit, using only blending modes

Tip 6: Masking

Masking out an image is key to almost all compositing workflows, and is often the most time-consuming, tedious part. You have two main areas of masking to choose from when an image needs to be isolated from its surroundings. Manual masking is the preferred method of most top graphics professionals: usually this means using the pen tool, brushing in Quick Mask mode, or using the images channels to create an Alpha Channel mask. Alternatively, automatic masking can be effected from an ever-increasing range of tools and third-party plug-ins within Photoshop. Which method you choose will often be determined by how much time you have, the complexity of the task and the intended use of the image.

Rather than going through every masking technique (there are plenty of resources out there, if you want to learn about how each tool works), here is a quick run down of some time savers.

Quick Mask for Web Imagery

It might sound obvious as a time-saving trick, but when you need to mask an image in super-quick time, the Quick Mask really can be a life saver. I use it for Web imagery, as the edge details will then not be so apparent at the fixed pixel view the user will have. It is also important to choose an image with decent contrast between your masking subject and its background, or the Quick Selection tool will not do a great job with really tough selections.

6 Quick-selection in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Quick Mask tool

Know Your Background Color

You can often save a lot of time masking, if you know and bear in mind what background your masked image will be composited on. Keep you goal in mind; when you need to get the job done, release your mind from the constraints of perfect masking and do the bare minimum!

Refine Edge

The Refine Edge tool set is a very powerful, non-destructive set of tools to help you refine any selection that is currently active. It can save you time, in fixing problem edges you may have encountered with other selection tools. The values in the Refine Edge dialog box remain constant from one adjustment to the next, meaning this tool can also be great for ensuring the edges of composited images have the same level of softness, smoothing and contrast.

For Photoshop CS5 only: Photoshop CS5 has a time- and frustration-saving tool lodged inside its Refine Edge feature which can yield outstanding results. When it comes to masking fine details, every designer will tell you that hair is the most challenging. The Edge Detection tool allows you to identify the unwanted colors in your image while intelligently masking edge details; it can effectively identify the finest hair details and mask them out in a non-destructive dialog box, with minimal work on your part, and do a very convincing job.

6 Refine-edge in Compositing in Adobe Photoshop: Time-Saving Tips
Refine Edge dialog box

Pen Tool

One thing I always do with the Pen tool, is keep a finger hovered over the Alt key; this is really useful as at any point, you can hold it down to move just one handle, and to freeze the corresponding handle in place. You can also Alt-click any point on your path to toggle between a corner point and a smooth point.

Conclusion

There is no shortcut to becoming proficient on your chosen tool or in your chosen craft, be it Photoshop or anything else; but once you have mastered a tool and understand its power, it is then up to you to do what you do best: be creative with it. This means looking at those everyday tasks you do, the time limitations you are faced with and your ability to improvise. Look under the hood once in a while, and be creative and inventive with everything you do!

Further reading

(wcp) (vf)


© Daniel Durrans 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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50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

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Infographics are a great way to present information in a way that’s easy for most people to understand. A lot of people learn visually, and can get a better grasp on what you’re trying to say if you display it graphically.

As designers, infographics can present information to us that benefits our design businesses, and gives us more insight into the technologies we depend on for our livelihoods. Below are fifty infographics that are useful and/or interesting, and pertain directly to the world of web design.

Interesting Infographics

These infographics might not provide information that’s directly related to the business and practice of website design, but they still pertain to the web in general and are likely to be of interest to designers and developers:

The Darwinian Evolution of Photoshop — This infographic shows the evolution of Photoshop, including all twelve major releases and the differences between them.

Evolutionofphotoshop in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Journey of a Tweet — This infographic shows the potential journey of a photo posted to Twitter across social media and the rest of the web.

Journey Of A Tweet Illus in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Biggest Shift Since the Industrial Revolution — This infographic shows the shift in content and relationships as they move to social media.

Thebiggestshift in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Are We Addicted to the Internet? — Here’s an extensive infographic talking about the level of Internet usage in the U.S. and potential signs and levels of addiction.

Areweaddictedtotheinternet in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Marketing With the Masses: The Science of Word of Mouth — This infographic breaks down the effects of word of mouth marketing, as well as how it works and where it happens.

Scienceofwordofmouth in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Going Local — This infographic, created for GigaOM by Column Five Media, shows the market share and other information for six of the most popular location-based web services (Gowalla, Foursquare, MyTown, Where.com, Brightkite, and Geodelic).

Goinglocal in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

All You Need to Know About Web Designers — Here’s an interesting graphic that breaks down the demographics of web designers worldwide.

All You Need To Know About Webdesigners in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Why Brands Cannot Ignore Social Media Mavens — This informal infographic showcases why social media mavens are vital to a brand’s online marketing success.

Brandscantignoresmmavens in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

B2B Social Media Marketing — Here’s an infographic that illustrates statistics about business to business social media marketing, including future predictions and effectiveness of different channels.

B2bmarketingfacebook in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Everbody’s Doing It: How Marketers Are Utilizing Social Media in 2010 — This infographic offers an overview of how companies are using social media to market themselves and their products, as well as their attitudes toward social media.

Everybodysdoingit in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Anatomy of a Search Marketer — This infographic from SEOmoz illustrates the answers to their 2010 SEO Industry Survey.

Anatomyofasearchmarketer in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

DIY Guide to Successful Linkbait Infographic — Infographics can be used to provide instruction as well as just presenting facts. This example does a great job of providing step-by-step instructions for creating popular web content.

Diylinkbait in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Why Do We Follow Companies on Twitter? — This simple infographic breaks down results of a survey of 1500 consumers about what their motivations are for following brands on Twitter.

Whydowefollow in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Business Behind Facebook — Ever wondered how Facebook makes their money and what their business model is based on? This infographic explains it all in general terms and actual dollar figures.

Facebookbusiness in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Understanding Google PageRank — This infographic shows exactly how the Google PageRank system works, including how different types of incoming links affect your rank differently.

Googlepagerank in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

A Guide to Internet Memes — Here’s an infographic that shows a variety of popular memes, starting with The Dancing Baby and including Rickrolling and The Hamster Dance, with history for each meme.

Internetmemes in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Most Popular Design Blogs by Twitter Followers and Facebook Fans — Here’s a great infographic that shows the most popular design-related blogs out there, displayed based on their Twitter followers and Facebook fans.

Populardesignblogs in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

History of the Internet — Here’s an interesting infographic that shows some of the major milestones in the history of the Internet, starting in 1962.

Historyoftheinternet in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Famous Rivalries: Facebook vs. Everyone — This infographic shows the history of Facebook’s rivalries with other online services.

Facebookvseveryone in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

How Android is Taking Over — This infographic from GigaOm showcases how Android smartphones are gaining market share and are likely to continue doing so by comparing all of the major smartphone OSs.

Howandroidistakingover in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Google vs. Apple — This GigaOm infographic shows the rivalry between Google and Apple, in timeline form.

Googlevsapple in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The App Store Economy — Here’s an infographic from early 2010 that shows the economy built around Apple’s App Store, by the numbers.

Appstoreeconomy in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

2010 Cloud Computing State of the Union — This infographic showcases what’s happening in the world of cloud computing and virtualization, based on a survey done by Zenoss.

Cloudcomputingsotu in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Social Buying Universe — Here’s an infographic that showcases the world of social buying, including services like Groupon and Living Social, and their influence.

Socialbuyinguniverse in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Rise of the Cloud — This infographic from GigaOm illustrates the demand for web-based software and storage, as well as public sentiment toward those services.

Riseofthecloud in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

How to Get Rid of Villains in Social Media — This infographic, based on Todd Heim’s post “8 Villains of Social Media“, shows how to defeat the villains present in social media, including skeptics, trolls, and shameless link droppers.

Villainsofsocialmedia in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Meet iPad’s Competition — This infographic shows what the iPad’s main competition is in the world of computing, gaming, and e-readers.

Meetipadscompetition in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Social Marketing Compass — This infographic shows the different aspects of social media marketing, and which areas different types of users should be focusing on.

Socialmarketingcompass in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Hierarchy of Digital Distractions — Here’s an infographic similar to Maslow’s Hierarhcy of Needs, but instead illustrates common digital distractions (like Twitter, email, and different kinds of users).

Hierarchyofdigitaldistractions in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Flickr User Model — Here’s a visual look at the Flickr user model, and what potentially happens to a photo once it’s posted to Flickr.

Flickrusermodel in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Facebook Factbook — Here’s a visual look at the first six years of Facebook and it’s phenomenal growth.

Facebookfactbook in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Social Media Effect — This infographic shows what can potentially happen to online content once it starts being passed around the various social media channels.

Socialmediaeffect in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Internet Censorship — This infographic shows the state of Internet censorship around the world as of 2010, including which countries most heavily censor their internet users.

Internetcensorship in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

How Google Works — This infographic shows how Google indexes and ranks content on the Internet, in flow-chart format.

Howgoogleworks in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The CMO’s Guide to the Social Landscape — This infographic shows what different social media services are good for different kinds of content marketing (customer communication, brand exposure, driving traffic to your site, and SEO).

Cmosociallandscape in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

What Are People Really Buying Online — This pie-chart style infographic shows what people really purchase online, and compares it to what they buy in-store.

Whatpeoplebuyonline in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Who Participates and What People Are Doing Online — This chart shows the different kinds of internet users and what they actually do online.

Whatpeopledoonline in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Casting a Wider Net with Social Media — This simple infographic illustrates how publishing to and sharing content from social media sites can increase your site’s traffic.

Socialmediawidernet in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Building a Company with Social Media — This infographic shows how social media can be used by each department in a company to build that company.

Buildingacompany in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

The Blogosphere We Call Home — This infographic breaks down the blogosphere in terms of who’s blogging, what they’re blogging about, and how much time they’re spending doing it.

Blogospherewecallhome in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

U.S. Data Consumption in One Day — This is an amazing infographic that shows how much data is consumed by people in the U.S. in a single day.

Usdataconsumption in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Five Years in History of Online Video — This infographic shows the prevalence of online video and how it changed between 2004 and 2009.

Historyofonlinevideo in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Profile of a Twitter User — This infographic shows the most common kinds of Twitter users and what to do with them.

Profileofatwitteruser in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

How Much Time is Wasted on Loading Unnecessary Data? — Since broadband Internet access is pretty much the norm these days, a lot of designers have stopped paying so much attention to file sizes and load times. This infographic shows just how much time and bandwidth is wasted by all the unnecessary data that loads on a website.

Unnecessarydata in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Useful Infographics

These infographics include information that’s directly useful to website design:

How Do Colors Affect Purchases? — by KISSmetrics, shows us what impact colors have on the buying decisions of online shoppers. An invaluable resource for ecommerce designers.

Colorsaffectpurchases in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers
8 Levels of Information Technology Security — This infographic shows potential threats to IT security in a data center, as well as the typical methods used to combat them.

8levelsofitsecurity in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Global Downloads Speed Comparison — This infographic compares the various typical download speeds from all over the world.

Globalspeedcomparison in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

How Popular is the iPhone Anyway — This infographic shows the popularity of the iPhone in terms of sales, market share, number of apps downloaded, and more.

Howpopularistheiphone in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Operation E-Commerce: A Game of Dissecting the Best E-Commerce Software — This infographic illustrates the necessary features of great e-commerce software, all built around the classic Operation board game.

Operationecommerce in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

Colours in Cultures — Here’s a handy infographic that shows what the meanings of different colors are in different cultures, including Western/American, Japanese, Hindu, Native American, Chinese, Eastern European, Muslim, and others.

Coloursincultures in 50 Interesting and Useful Infographics for Web Designers

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