Archive for March, 2011

The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks

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The possibility of embedding any font you like into websites via @font-face is an additional stylistic device which promises to abolish the monotony of the usual system fonts. It surely would be all too easy if there was only one Web font format out there. Instead, there’s quite a variety, as you will get to know in this article.

This quick introduction to @font-face will lead you towards a guide through the @font-face kit generator. If you want to make Web use of your already licensed desktop fonts, read up on how to embed them from your own server. Topped up with some helpful tips, tricks and workarounds, this article will hopefully provide some useful insights.

Web Font Formats

EOT, TTF, OTF, CFF, AFM, LWFN, FFIL, FON, PFM, PFB, WOFF, SVG, STD, PRO, XSF, and the list goes on. To find one’s way through in this veritable jungle of font formats is not exactly easy. Let’s have a closer look at the pros and cons of font formats that are particularly relevant for their use on websites.

TrueType

This format was developed in the late 1980s as a competitor to Adobe’s Type 1 fonts used in PostScript. As a scalable outline format, it replaced the common bitmap fonts that were used for screen display at that time. Microsoft took up the TrueType format as well and it soon evolved into the standard format for system fonts due to the fact that it offered fine-tuned control for a precise display of font in particular sizes.

OpenType

Microsoft and Adobe teamed up in developing this font format. Based on the TrueType format, OpenType offers additional typographical features such as ligatures, fractions or context sensitive glyphs and the like. However, browser support of these features which are common in sophisticated layout and illustration programs is still unsatisfactory. There are two different versions of OpenType fonts, depending on the outline technology used. There are:

  • OpenType fonts with TrueType Outlines (OpenType TT) and
  • OpenType fonts with PostScript Outlines (OpenType PS)

Wfs-opentypeflavours in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks
OpenType comes in two different versions.

OpenType PS is a so-called CFF based file format (CFF = compact file format). This is relevant when using OpenType PS fonts as Web fonts, because PostScript based formats are displayed without subpixel rendering on Windows platforms which affects the rendering quality considerably. That’s why TrueType based fonts are the better choice as Web fonts, even though Microsoft will solve this rendering issue in the future. The structures of TrueType and OpenType fonts are very similar and browser support is available in Safari 3.1 and higher, Firefox 3.5 and Opera 10 (and of course newer versions).

EOT

Internet Explorer has supported the proprietary Embedded OpenType (EOT) standard from the late 1990s. It’s a variation of the TrueType and OpenType formats that provide the following particularities:

  • EOT fonts are a compact form of OpenType optimized for quick delivery on the Web due to data compression.
  • By means of URL-binding, EOT fonts can be tied to a specific domain. The fonts can then only be delivered to and used on those Web pages. This technique helps prevent fonts from being copied and used without a licence.

EOT is exclusively supported by Internet Explorer. Even though it might not succeed as a Web font format in the future, it still makes sense to use this format today in order to supply the users of various IE versions with Web fonts. Current IE versions (< 9) do not use any other format.

If you want to convert TTF fonts to natively compressed EOT files, you can use EOTFast (a free application) currently available only for Windows.

WOFF

Unlike EOT, the Web Open Font Format (WOFF) is in the process of being standardized as a recommendation by the W3C which published WOFF as a working draft back in July 2010.

WOFF came into existence as a kind of a compromise between font foundries and browser companies, so it’s no wonder that WOFF has been developed by two font designers (Erik van Blokland and Tal Leming) in cooperation with Mozilla developer Jonathan Kew. Essentially, WOFF is a wrapper that contains TrueType and OpenType fonts, and it’s not really a new format of its own.

WOFF uses an integrated compression algorithm named zlib, which offers file size reduction for TrueType fonts exceeding 40%. Furthermore, meta data can be added, e.g. a user’s licence. However, this data presents only meta information and is not validated by browsers.

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Thanks to WOFF, Mozilla can use its corporate typeface FF Meta.

The format has been supported by Firefox since version 3.6, and by Google Chrome since version 5.0. All other browser manufacturers are working on adding full support in future releases. Fonts can be converted into the WOFF format by the online service Font Squirrel free of charge.

SVG

SVG fonts are text files that contain the glyph outlines represented as standard SVG elements and attributes, as if they were single vector objects in the SVG image. But this is also one of the biggest disadvantages of SVG fonts. While EOT, WOFF and PostScript-flavoured OpenType have compression built into the font format — SVG fonts are always uncompressed and usually pretty large.

SVG fonts are not really an alternative to the other Web font formats, and iOS 4.2 is the first version of Mobile Safari to support native Web fonts (in TrueType format) instead of SVG. However, SVG is the only format that can be used for the iPhone and iPad prior to iOS 4.2.

Tools, such as Font Squirrel, can be used to convert fonts into this format. Another possibility to obtain SVG fonts is to rent them from one of the numerous Web font providers.

Wfs-typkit-ipad in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks
Typekit also serves its fonts as SVG files for the iPhone and iPad. Typekit no longer servers SVG fonts to iOS devices. The service serves TrueType fonts to iOS 4.2 devices and higher.

@font-face Revolution

The CSS3 property @font-face presents so many new possibilities that a veritable gold-digging mentality is taking hold of Web designers. There’s hope that regular system fonts will soon be abolished by Web font embedding, which enables us to choose practically any typeface and font style they want — just like in print design.

With regard to typography, the Web is way behind print. Take headlines: in print, condensed typefaces come in handy because they allow more words to fit on one line. System font collections, however, usually have no condensed fonts. Also, companies cannot use their proprietary fonts on their own websites. Instead, they have to replace them with standard fonts, such as Arial, which makes establishing a consistent corporate identity across all media impossible.

@font-face in the Late 1990s

The ability to embed any font into a website has been around for a while. Netscape 4 and Internet Explorer 4 supported @font-face by the end of the 1990s. The rule allowed us to deposit a font on a server and deliver it through a Web page.

@font-face {
font-family: Gentium;
src: url(fonts/gentium.eot);
}

This technique was ahead of its time. At that point it was used for simple grayscale anti-aliasing. This was no problem for system fonts, which were laboriously optimized for rendering on screen, but other fonts were not rendered properly; they lacked the benefits of manual on-screen optimization. Instead of improving Web typography, the non-system fonts made websites look worse.

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It’s no wonder that the @font-face rule was removed in the CSS 2.1 specification. Using system fonts was the general practice in Web design, especially for copy. For headlines, several workarounds have been established. Some designers replaced text with a bitmap file or a Flash movie that displayed the headline in a particular font.

Another approach that has emerged in the past few years is to replace headlines with vector graphics, with the help of JavaScript. Typeface.js and Cufón offer this functionality. Each of these techniques, though, has one problem or the other, be it incompatibility with search engines or issues with zooming.

Successful Second Run, Thanks to Subpixel Rendering

The introduction of Safari 3.1 by Apple marked a turning point in the use of Web fonts. The browser update brought the old @font-face rule back. A significant improvement came with the introduction of flat-panel LCD displays, which have high screen resolutions and anti-aliasing via subpixel rendering. Subpixel rendering takes advantage of the fact that each pixel on a color LCD is composed of individual red, green and blue subpixels. It uses these subpixels to anti-alias text, which increases the apparent resolution of an LCD display and thus improves the rendering of text — even text set at very small sizes.

On Mac OS X platforms, this function is activated by default. Windows uses its own trademark, ClearType, which is activated by default on Windows Vista and Windows 7 but turned off on Windows XP. In Microsoft Office 2007 and 2010, Internet Explorer 7+ and Windows Live Messenger, ClearType is turned on by default, even if it’s not enabled throughout the operating system.

Webkit-2 in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks
Safari 3.1 offered support for standard font formats for the first time (demo).

Subpixel rendering is displayed in Safari on Mac OS X. What’s remarkable about Safari’s @font-face support is that, for the first time, embedding standard formats — namely, TrueType (TTF) and OpenType (TTF/OTF) — is possible without any prior conversion, as the following CSS shows:

@font-face {
font-family: Gentium;
src: url(fonts/gentium.otf);
}

The Font Foundries’ Concerns

Suppliers of commercial fonts, however, were not exactly happy about the new functionality. Anyone could now download and embed fonts without paying the licensing fee. A lively debate between browser makers and font foundries began… and continues. The foundries want commercial fonts to be protected from bootlegging and unlawful use, while the browser makers do not feel obligated to claim the foundries’ copyrights; they instead argue that content providers are responsible for declaring any copyright-protected fonts on their websites, just as they are obliged to do with images, video, text and other assets.

Using the @font face Kit Generator

For a practical test you might want to download the font package at Graublau Sans Web. This font package offers a PostScript-based OpenType font that can actually be used on Safari 3.1+, Firefox 3.5+ and Opera 10+ without any changes. In order to provide browser support for Internet Explorer and improve the screen display, you can use the @font-face Kit Generator. Click the “Add Fonts” button and upload the respective font with all its weights. Then choose the “Expert” radio button and check all the necessary options, which we’ll go through in more detail now:

Font Formats

The main problem is that you have to activate EOT in order to obtain @font-face support on Internet Explorer IE4 to IE8 (in IE9 RC, WOFF is supported as well). SVG fonts will mainly be needed for Mobile Safari on the iPhone and iPad prior to iOS 4.2, although Chrome and Opera can handle this format as well. Alternatively or rather in addition to SVG, there’s the compressed version SVGZ, which offers a much smaller file size. Unfortunately, it doesn’t run on the iPhone so you’ll need the SVG font anyway.

Creating a TrueType font format will allow for support in Safari (since 3.1), Firefox (since 3.5) and Opera (since 10). Checking the WOFF option won’t increase browser support these days, but it sure will in the near future, when WOFF has become the standard Web font format.

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Rendering and Miscellaneous Options

  • Add Hinting: This option offers improved font display in Windows. You should only uncheck it if you are absolutely positive that the respective fonts are screen-optimized already.
  • WebOnlyâ„¢ adds specific modifications which allow browsers to use the modified fonts but avoid installation of these fonts on common operating systems. Checking this option helps to avoid unintended illegal copies.
  • Keep OT Features: Desktop fonts may have a number of OpenType functions. As there is little browser support for these functions today, you might want to remove them with this option (rendering and miscellaneous options). In order to keep some of the standard, i.e. already supported OpenType functions such as ligatures, you can activate this option.
  • Remove Kerning: Another possibility to reduce the file size is by checking this option which will erase all kerning values that are contained for specific letter combinations. In case you are going to use the font for body text, this option is highly recommended. For headlines it should be handled with care or not be done at all as the missing kerning values might lead to the unpleasant effect of the shape of words looking like a Swiss cheese.
  • Simplify Outlines does exactly that: it tries to simplify the outline of characters. As this option reduces the quality of screen display, it is not advisable to use it.
  • Build Cufón File isn’t directly part of the options for @font-face embedding. For further details on building a file you can also check the Cufón website.

Subsetting

Subsetting means that all superfluous characters are removed. Whether or not this is actually necessary depends on the respective font. Some fonts can easily contain thousands of characters of various writing systems which bloats the font file considerably. Without subsetting such fonts, they are not suitable for use as Web fonts.

The option Basic Subsetting is set as default and offers the usual Western European glyph allocation based on the character set MacRoman. Custom Subsetting allows for a custom defined scope of contained characters and glyphs. Whereas, the option No Subsetting deactivates subsetting completely and converts the font with all contained characters and glyphs.

CSS-Formats

The @font-face Kit Generator creates both the converted fonts and the matching CSS files which is helpful as the CSS code can be huge, especially when several fonts with various font formats are involved.

You can choose three different versions:

The Fontspring syntax is currently the most simple and compatible one. It can deliver the WOFF file to IE9 and EOT to IE prior version 9 and it also works on mobile operating systems like iOS and Android.

CSS Options

The option Style Linking groups styles by family. This allows for addressing the fonts later through the CSS properties font weight and font-style.

This option will only work properly if the font family doesn’t contain more than the common four styles, i.e. regular, italic, bold and bold italic. Otherwise, you should leave the option unchecked so that fonts can be addressed by independent family names.

Last but not least, the option Base64 Encode embeds Web fonts with a base64 encoding into the CSS code instead of creating a separate font file. As a result, the fonts don’t appear as font files in the browser’s cache.

Code Sample

The following example illustrates what your CSS code for @font-face embedding might look like:

@font-face {
font-family: Graublauweb;
src: url('Graublauweb.eot'); /* IE9 Compatibility Modes */
src: url('Graublauweb.eot?') format('eot'),  /* IE6-IE8 */
url('Graublauweb.woff') format('woff'), /* Modern Browsers */
url('Graublauweb.ttf')  format('truetype'), /* Safari, Android, iOS */
url('Graublauweb.svg#svgGraublauweb') format('svg'); /* Legacy iOS */
}

The first statement is for IE9 in IE7 & IE8 render modes. In the second source declaration, the EOT file for Internet Explorer is declared first in this comma-separated list and the name is followed by a question mark. This fools IE into thinking the rest of the string is a query string and loads just the EOT file.

The other browsers follow the spec and select the format they need based on the src cascade and the format hint. The SVG specification contains an additional hash tag as a unique identification number. This is necessary as SVG files may contain several fonts. However, the Fontsquirrel @font-face generator takes care of the identification number and its embedding into the CSS code automatically.

Please notice that the syntax suggested by Ethan Dunham in his article The New Bulletproof @Font-Face Syntax and revised by Richard Fink in an article on New @Font-Face Syntax: Simpler, Easier no longer works in Internet Explorer 9. Also, take a look at Ethan’s follow-up Further Hardening of the Bulletproof Syntax.

Loading Time Increases With Amount of Fonts

By means of the above-mentioned options, file sizes of Web fonts can be reduced to approximately 30 to 60 kilobytes. Larger font files or too many fonts on one web page can slow down loading of the page, especially on mobile devices.

Weird Interim Solution in Firefox

Most browsers won’t show any text before all Web fonts are imported. Firefox, however, displays the text using a system font and renders the text again, when the embedded Web fonts are completely loaded. This technique results in a “flash of unstyled text” that sometimes leads to side-effects. Web designers can control this behaviour by using Google’s Webfont Loader.

Wfs-graublau in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks

The result of the above process looks like this in Safari on Mac OS X.

Embedding Web Fonts From Your Server

You don’t necessarily always have to rent or licence fonts for use on Web pages. You can also pimp your already licenced desktop fonts for cross-browser Web font embedding and upload the fonts to your own Web server.

Fonts to Choose and Fonts to Avoid

Before you start converting your desktop fonts into Web fonts, make sure that the licence with the respective font entitles you to do so. Generally, commercial licence agreements do not permit the storing of font software on a publicly accessible Web server. This, however, is a prerequisite when using the @font-face rule.

Currently, commercial font providers count on Web font embedding services. Only a few suppliers deliver special Web font packages for storage on the customer’s own Web server, among them FSI FontShop International and Fontspring. A growing number of webfont packages can also be licensed via MyFonts.com.

Once the Web Open Font Format (WOFF) is accepted as a standard, more font vendors might offer this service.

Embedding Free and Open-Source Fonts

Besides commercial fonts, there’s a wide variety of freeware and open source fonts which you can embed into your Web pages. A list with suitable fonts that are free for use via @font-face embedding can be found on webfonts.info.

Another huge collection of such fonts is offered by Font Squirrel. It is a useful tool when it comes to converting desktop fonts into Web font formats as it offers a powerful tool, the @font-face Kit Generator.

Please note that the fonts you want to convert have to be legally eligible for Web font embedding!

Ffgenerator in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks
Creating web fonts made easy by Font Squirrel’s generator.

Tips, Tricks and Workarounds

The possibilities for using custom fonts on Web pages have developed more quickly over the past two years than anyone had expected. But Web designers still have to struggle with a clutter of formats in order to provide cross-browser support for a given font. This problem will subside as soon as the Web Open Font Format (WOFF) is established as the standard Web font format.

Wfs-trevor22 in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks
Typographic variety beyond the monotony of system fonts.

Another obstacle, mentioned earlier, is the prevalence of Windows computers on which subpixel rendering is deactivated (either by default on Windows XP or by preference on the part of users). Compared to system fonts, most Web fonts are displayed at low quality on screen displays that lack subpixel rendering. Time will solve this problem, as users replace old hardware and operating systems. In the meantime, Internet Explorer 9 works with a text engine called DirectWrite that delivers significantly improved rendering.

Using Web fonts in your design requires thorough testing on as many different browsers and platforms as possible, with a close look at various options for rendering text. If the screen display is of poor quality and lacks subpixel rendering, then opt for graceful degradation by serving system fonts to older browsers and OS. Conditional comments are the easiest way to exclude older browsers and operating systems from style sheets with Web fonts. Of course, JavaScript is a more elegant way to detect whether a client’s subpixel rendering is turned on.

Text Layout

Even though some Web layouts are drawing nearer in sophistication to print layouts (thanks to rich typography and Web font embedding), there’s still a big difference: browsers do not automatically hyphenate text. Especially in languages with many long words (such as German), justifying text is not possible without creating spacious gaps, and thus reducing the readability of the body text.

With JavaScript, you can provide language-based client-side hyphenation. A server-side solution is offered by phpHyphenator. Still, these are band-aid solutions for a function that should be integral to every browser — hopefully in the near future.

OpenType Typography Features

Another text-layout shortcoming shared by common browsers has come into focus as Web fonts spread: high-end desktop publishing programs, such as InDesign and QuarkXPress 7+, do not support OpenType typographic features.

Web-services-041 in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks

OpenType functions add several smart options that enhance a font’s typographic and language-support capabilities. If an application supports these options, then characters can be replaced by additional features automatically. For Roman scripts, these mainly concern ligatures, fractions and small capitals.

Small-caps in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks
Computer-generated small caps (gray above) and true small caps (blue below) in Firefox 4 beta.

Some fonts can be put to use only through OpenType functions in the first place. Take joined Roman lettering or Arabic writing, in which the shape of a character depends on its position in the word and on adjacent characters. Comprehensive OpenType fonts might, therefore, contain alternative glyphs for a given character. By means of OpenType functions, the basic version of a character would be replaced by a version with matching connections, based on context, as this screenshot illustrates:

Wfs-ffot-calt in The @Font-Face Rule And Useful Web Font Tricks
The blue lettering on the bottom exhibits a perfect joining of characters, thanks to context-based replacement in Firefox 4.

The current beta version of Firefox 4 offers access to this OpenType feature for the first time. You can define with this browser-specific attribute:

h1 {
-moz-font-feature-settings: 'smcp=1';
}

This would display the headline in true small caps, provided that the font has a small caps case.

Microsoft has a list of common OpenType features. So far, there are no standards to address these features in your CSS style sheets, but the CSS Fonts Module Level 3 draft mentions the possibility. Other browser companies will likely follow this example sooner or later.

Browser developers still have a long way to go before the Web catches up to the text layout in print design, let alone overtakes it. It’s good to know, though, that there’s a growing awareness of typographic subtleties among browser manufacturers. No doubt, further progress can be expected soon!

(al) (sp) (ik)


© Ralf Hermann for Smashing Magazine, 2011. | Permalink | Post a comment | Smashing Shop | Smashing Network | About Us
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Useful PSD Files For Your Creativity

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PSD files can be used to create beautiful, stunning, vibrant and very creative business cards, icons, characters, website layouts, photo manipulations and much more. With Adobe Photoshop’s convenient interface, even newbies can understand how to work with some of the basic tools and options that this fantastic program has to offer. Here are 40 PSDs you may find useful for any ongoing projects you may have at the moment.


Please note that all of these files listed below are free of charge, however not all of them are available to be used for both commercial as well as personal use. That’s why we strongly recommend you to check the additional information that the artists provide along with their freebie. In case there isn’t such information, be sure to contact the creators and ask for their permission to avoid any copyright infringement. Thank you.

Magnifa Pro – Zooming Glass PSD
Here is a useful PSD file that could be used for peviewing images for zooming some special parts of it:

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Renders PSD
A PSD that contains a collection of free randers that can be used for some abstract design work:

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Brush Icon PSD
This high-quality PSD can be used as an icon for your blog or webpage but as well as an application icon it will also work great:

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Gas Can PSD
This high-detailed gas can PSD can be used just for some specific websites or design works:

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Little Pie Chart PSD
A pie chart PSD that can be used for presenting different data and information in an elegant way:

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iMac PSD File
This is a high-detailed Mac screen that can be used on templates for sale or displaying a custom image on it’s screen:

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Stalker Pass II PSD File
This PSD file could be used on an About page where a picture as well as some description could be placed:

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Cassette Psd File
This PSD file would look great on a music-related website, or a musician’s portfolio:

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Web UI Treasure Chest PSD
This high-detailed treasure chest contains over 100 stunning elements that are great to be used for your user-interface work:

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Under Construction PSD
This yellow helmet can be used to show some “Coming soon” or “Under construction” pages with style:

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Mettalic Bottle PSD
A PSD file that can be used for placing your logotype on it, in order to see how it would look like as a preview:

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DVD Plastic Case PSD
This elegant DVD plastic case can be used to place different digital movie covers so all of your movies will now have their own covers:

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Apple Keyboard PSD
A high-detailed apple keyboard PSD that you could use for interesting design projects:

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Shopping Card Chart PSD
This shopping card PSD has been created with a great user interface. It can be coded and and placed into your e-commerce website for increasing the website’s beauty:

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Polaroid Revised PSD
This PSD can be used for giving your photos a new, beautiful as well as an “old” look. Check it out:

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Pretty Progress Bar PSD
This progress bar PSD could be used very well on your website but also in some user interface design projects:

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Simple Sign-Up Form PSD
This simple sign-up form can be used on UI design projects, but as well as on your webpage – for increasing the beauty of a simple login/sign-up form:

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Stitched FabricHorizontal Accordion PSD
This is a beautiful fabric textured, stitched accordion that is available in PSD format:

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Old World Map PSD
The textured, grunge-styled old world map can be used to achieve a dark and grunge-looking website:

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Blue Identification Card PSD
This high-detailed and well-designed identification card can be used as an additional element in some design works:

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Magician Hat & Wand PSD
This high-detailed hat with a pretty magic wand can be used in some specific magic-related websites and projects:

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Request Quote Form PSD
This is a beautiful and very usable Request Quote Form that can be placed on your website for giving to your custom contact form a very interesting look:

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Paint Brushes PSD
This is a beautiful collection of brush icons that are available in three different colors: red, blue and green:

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Terra Nova Planet Resource PSD
The terra PSD resource is a very detailed and stunning piece of art that can be used in some creative posters and tutorials:

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Member ID PSD
This PSD file contains over three DeviantArt ID pages that are available in more than 9 colors and styles:

Psd-files-24 in Useful PSD Files For Your Creativity

NFL Logotype PSD
This NFL logotype could be used as a secondary element for some simple design projects rather than related to Web ones:

Psd-files-26 in Useful PSD Files For Your Creativity

Post It: Paper Note
The paper note is a modern and usable PSD file that can be used for some web templates, posters and tutorials:

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Magazine Template PSD
This is a simple magazine mock-up template that can be used in some ad projects, however not in Web ones:

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iPod Nano Multi-Touch PSD
This PSD contains a beautiful, fresh-announced iPod Nano that is available in 5 different colors:

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iPhone 4 PSD
This beautiful and elegant PSD file contains a new gadget phone that is presented in both back and front views:

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Apple Logotype PSD
This is a high-quality Apple logotype that can be used for applications, tools, Web layouts or even as an icon:

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Calendars PSD
These calendars are available in 3 different colors and can be used on your website sidebar or footer so your visitors can see the current day:

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Battery PSD
This elegant PSD battery can be used for displaying the current status of the battery in some mobile applications:

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Book PSD
This textured and grunge-looking PSD book mock-up can be used for some strange but interesting design projects:

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Led Cinema Display PSD
Here is another Mac screen you can use as an icon or for different applications or tools:

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Sticker PSD
This sticker PSD can be a great background for a good-looking folded icon design:

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Anti Theft Card PSD
A PSD that can be very helpful for art creators and digital artists:

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Adobe Master Col CS5 Logos PSD
Here is a nice collection of icons that are available in Adobe Creative Suite 5:

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Web 2.0 Pack PSD
This resource contains a big number of useful PSD files that are helpful for almost any designer:

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Globe PSD File
This PSD contains terra gloves available in 2 different colors:

Psd-files-31 in Useful PSD Files For Your Creativity

(ik)


HTML5 sectioning elements, headings, and document outlines

A subject I have returned to a couple of times is how to use headings to make good document outlines in HTML documents. See Headings and document structure conclusions for a summary of my reasoning.

Recently I’ve been taking a closer look at how HTML5 changes the way document outlines are created. I’m not entirely sure that I have understood the specification fully, but if I have, I think the new outline algorithm requires you to think carefully when using the new sectioning elements (article, section, nav, and aside) if you also want a coherent document outline without untitled sections.

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Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

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As most of you may already know, every second Tuesday of a month we send out an email newsletter to our subscribers (over 50,000 at the moment). Every newsletter issue contains exclusive, short articles that present recent design techniques, freebies as well as useful resources and tools. We work hard to make every issue special and useful, interesting and entertaining, and therefore your feedback is very important to us. (Feel free to take a look at the latest newsletter issue).

Today, we’re particularly pleased to announce that our Smashing Newsletter is turning one year old tomorrow (yaaaaay!). To celebrate this special day, we’d like to give away some remarkable, must-have books. Besides, we’d like to look back at the last year and present you a selection of the most interesting articles from our previous issues. And, just for the record, the next issue is coming up tomorrow.

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The Smashing Newsletter has always been free of charge. We fully respect your privacy, and we would never share your data with third parties, nor would we ever spam you. You have our word. Join us today!

Subscribe to the Smashing Email Newsletter Now!



How Can You Win a Book?

Easy! Just share your thoughts about the newsletter in the comment section below to this post! What’s your opinion of newsletters in general? Who reads newsletters these days anyway? Is it a useful resource? Why do you read newsletters and which ones are you subscribed to?

Please do share your honest thoughts and personal opinion on the matter. In the end, we’ll randomly choose six readers who will win the book of their choice:

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  • Hardboiled Web Design
    by Andy Clarke
    Five Simple Steps, 390 pages
  • Stunning CSS3: A Project-Based Guide to the Latest in CSS
    by Zoe Mickley Gillenwater
    New Riders Press, 320 pages
  • Making Ideas Happen
    by Scott Belsky
    99%, 256 pages
  • Art: The Definitive Visual Guide
    by Dorling Kindersley
    Dorling Kindersley Ltd., 612 pages
  • Ordering Disorder: Grid Principles for Web Design
    by Khoi Vinh
    New Riders, 180 pages
  • The Book of Symbols: Reflections on Archetypal Images
    by the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism
    Taschen Verlag, 810 pages

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Exclusive Smashing buttons and stickers. The Smashing Animals are designed by the Twitter Whale creator Yiying Lu. Large view

Alternatively, you can also pick up the exclusive bundle of limited Smashing buttons and stickers.

The “Best Of” Smashing E-Mail Newsletters

For a year now, the Smashing Newsletter has delivered 183 short articles in total, which all of our email subscribers have received regularly. The ones below were their favorites:

Things I Learned About Browsers and the Web

For most of us, the Internet is a part of daily life, even if we don’t know everything there is to know about it. For things you’ve always wanted to know about the Web but were afraid to ask, we’ve found a book for you to flip through. Built in HTML5, this guide has it all, starting from the meaning of “Internet� all the way to open source and modern browsers.

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The guide 20 Things I Learned About Browsers and the Web is a brief reminder for anyone who’s curious about the basics of browsers and the Web. The neat little red man was illustrated by Christoph Niemann. (ik)

ProCSSor: Hassle-Free, Cleanly Formatted CSS

Not all CSS mark-up is pretty and cleanly formatted. Beautiful code can make editing and maintaining a whole lot easier. Ideally, this should be done from the beginning, as you create the style sheet; but sometimes we have to work on style sheets created by other designers who format their code differently. If you’re on a deadline, spending the extra time reformatting a style sheet can be quite time-intensive and not much fun.

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That’s where ProCSSor comes in. This online tool allows you to submit your CSS (either copy and paste the code, upload the file or point to a URL) and choose from formatting options. You can save options and reuse them any time you run code through ProCSSor. You can separate properties and selectors across multiple lines, indent up to four levels with either the space bar or Tab key and even sort properties. The tool also has a “Columnize� mode, which groups elements into columns, making for a more elegant style sheet; you need to deactivate “Fail-safe mode� to use it, though—keep in mind that juggling CSS properties can result in rendering problems in browsers. (cc) (vf)

What Can You Make Out of Paper?

Nothing beats paper when it comes to brainstorming, mind-mapping or simply jotting down notes. Paper, one of the “Four Great Inventions of Ancient China,� has become a vital material in many industries and cultures. No surprise, then, that many artists experiment with the resource in untraditional ways. Paper-folding techniques, such as origami, have been popular for ages. This ancient Japanese practice of turning a single piece of paper into a genuine work of art is definitely impressive.

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One could go even further with paper and produce, for example, complex shapes and sculptures and models from it. That’s what Richard Sweeny does. Richard says that his objects “are simple to construct, yet complex in appearance, and efficient in the way they are produced, both in terms of construction time and material used.” We have a hard time believing that his models are not as difficult to create as they look; they are truly beautiful and captivating.

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If you’re looking for more examples of paper modelling, then head on over to the artwork of Polyscene, and read the post “Masters of Paper Art and Paper Sculptures.â€� (cs)

Browser Details for Tech Support

As the operator of a website or online service, you know the problem: a gruff complaint to customer support because nothing works. And the customer, in his frustration, unfortunately forgets to provide further details.

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Where does an admin or programmer begin when all they have to go on is “does not work” or “is broken”? You need details: about the customer’s browser and its configuration. A reasonable approach to the problem would be to start with some queries, which the non-specialist would be able to only partially answer: “Which browser? Well, uh… this Mozzarella.” “Cookies? I haven’t baked in years.”

When in doubt, send your customers to the website Support Details. Their data will be automatically read out of the browser (including Flash version, operating system, cookies, JavaScript status, screen resolution, browser size and more) and can be copied, sent directly to you via email or saved. The free service uses Flash but can also complete its task without it. (sl)

Smarthistory: Inspiration from Rediscovering Art History

Having Dr. Beth Harris and Dr. Steven Zucker as teachers, anyone would have picked art history as their favorite subject in school. Instead of relying on the large expensive textbooks usually used in class, these two professors decided to create their own audio guides to be used in the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. These podcasts are not lectures but rather discussions that take place in front of the work being discussed, on the actual premises of the museum. This innovative approach to art history is at the heart of Smarthistory, a free multimedia Web book that offers a perfect opportunity to review art history.

Art1 in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

The website covers a wide variety of the artwork usually found in art history classes, ranging from ancient cultures to post-colonialism. In addition to the audio and video, Smarthistory contains articles and images organized by style and chronology. As a bonus, the user interface itself is worth looking at. The appealing design and intuitive navigation (which allows you to browse by era, style, artist and theme) makes this experience not only educational but enjoyable. (jb)

Insert a Layout Grid in Web Pages With #grid

While Photoshop and Fireworks are still the convention for designing websites, some designers are taking an alternative approach: creating mock-ups in actual mark-up (designing directly in the browser). In fact, many tools built into the browser can help you either prepare a quick mock-up or polish a nearly finished design. In particular, if you often do grid-based designs, you may find #grid extremely useful for adapting layout widths and alignments and for creating vertical rhythm on the page.

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#grid is a little tool that inserts a grid onto the Web page. You can hold the grid in place and toggle it between the foreground and background. To display the grid, just press a hot key on your keyboard, and you can set your own short keys to switch views. #grid comes set up with a 980 pixel-wide container, with 20-pixel gutters, and assumes one lead of 20 pixels. You can download the source code (JavaScript and CSS) and use classes for multiple grids. (vf)

Free High-Quality HTML Email Templates

Designing HTML emails is tricky. Because of the lack of proper CSS support in many email clients, Web designers often have to resort to nasty coding techniques or restrict their emails to simple layouts. But emails — whether newsletters, corporate memos or communications based on generic templates — don’t have to be ugly and boring.

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The Gallery of HTML Email Templates proves just that. The page presents 38 free HTML email templates (including PSD and HTML files), created by talented professional designers. Every template has been tested in more that 20 popular email clients, including Outlook 2010, Gmail, Lotus Notes, Apple Mail and the iPhone. All of the Photoshop documents are layered and ready to be tweaked. You can download all of the templates for free (320 MB) and use them for any private or commercial project. (vf)

Creating Dynamic Footnotes With CSS and jQuery

In body copy, footnotes can be a nice solution to hide content that is not directly relevant; for examples, linking to a citation source, explaining a particular term in detail or discussing something off-topic. In these situations, footnotes let readers jump to this information when they need it, while allowing the writer to focus on the important things and not get lost in details.

But in their simplest implementation – using sup tags and linking within the page – footnotes aren’t very user-friendly. They interrupt the experience, requiring the user to click the link, read the information and then return to the page with the browser’s “Back” button.

Footnote in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

Lukas Mathis has come up with an elegant solution to improve this user experience: his jQuery script shows the content of footnotes as soon as the user indicates that they are interested in it – i.e. when they move the cursor over the footnote symbol.

If the user’s browsing device doesn’t support mouse hovering, they can still jump to a footnote via its link. The script works in Firefox, Chrome, Safari, Opera and Internet Explorer 7+. Alternatively, you could try the accessible footnotes technique or BrandSpankingNew footnotes script. (vf)

LaunchList: The Designer’s Ultimate Website Check List

Every design project has many little details that one has to take care of before it goes live. Have you checked your content for spelling errors? Did you design a 404 page? What about the print style sheet? LaunchList helps you review important items before the big launch.

Launchlist in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

By default, the tool provides 28 items to be checked, but it also allows you to add custom items to the list. Each item can be commented on or crossed out. Once you’re done, you can send the report along with project’s details to multiple recipients via email. The email does not contain a direct link to the check list, but it has a plain text review of the things you have checked (along with your comments). If this tool is not flexible enough for you, you may want to look at the Ultimate Website Launch Checklist, which is also available as a PDF download. (vf)

Getting Creative… With Money

Paper money has been around for over a thousand years. The currency is familiar to us; we trust it, and we humans are creatures of habit, often hostile to change. But that hasn’t stopped designers and illustrators from experimenting with their own versions of these monetary staples.

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Many designers dream of being offered the chance to redesign the banknotes of their local currency or even contribute new kinds of legal tender. With all of the currency types in the world today, some more intricate than others, there is certainly no lack of inspiration to draw from. But when designers let their imagination run loose and try their hand at designing money, there is no telling what they come up with. For example, Xavi García has created a banknote by hand that reminds the user of the effort that went into its creation, replacing the currency value with the amount of time the note took to create.

Dowlingduncan in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

And Dowling | Duncan has proposed a complete revision of US currency. You can see this and more impressive money design submissions at the Dollar ReDesign Project website. (ks)

Rounded Images With CSS3 and jQuery

Have you ever tried to apply the border-radius and box-shadow properties to images? If you have, you probably noticed not only that modern browsers display corners differently, but that the corners look a bit unfinished and broken. Webkit displays rounded corners but does not support the inset box shadow. In Firefox, the border-radius doesn’t display at all (see the image below).

Css3-jquery in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

Nick La has come up with a solution to this problem. The idea is simple: wrap a span tag around the image element. Then, put the original image in the background with the background-image property, and then hide the original image by applying opacity: 0 to it. Or to make it easier, just embed a jQuery code to generate span tags for images on the fly (which you’ll find in his article).

The technique works with any image dimension and works even if the width and height attributes are not defined. Obviously, the user has to be using a modern browser to see the effect. (vf)

Unsuck It: Rebel Against Marketing Jargon

Have you ever read a company’s “About� page and were left wondering what exactly the company did? Or read a page that talked about all the features and benefits of a product and that tried to convince you that the product was the best thing since Wikipedia… but that didn’t really tell you a thing? Marketing and business jargon is confusing or meaningless at best, and completely unintelligible at worst.

Unsuckit in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

That’s where Unsuck It comes in. Enter any jargony word, and the online tool deciphers it and returns the true (unsucked) meaning. It’s useful for figuring out what a company is actually trying to say or for rewriting the horrible copy that a client has handed to you for its website. (cc)

Exposing Deceptive Design Patterns

Plenty of bad website designs out there are hard to use and serve only to frustrate users when one thing after another doesn’t work as expected. In many cases, these websites are designed by people who don’t follow common usability guidelines and best practices. Some websites out there, though, are purposely unfriendly. The designers who created them were perfectly aware of the effect their decisions would have. In fact, they designed the interfaces to deliberately guide users to do things they wouldn’t normally do.

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DarkPatterns.org aims to expose these black-hat designs whose sole aim is to misdirect and deceive visitors. Anti-usability design patterns that are currently identified on the website include the “Roach Motel,� “Bait and Switch,� “Privacy Zuckering� and “Forced Information Disclosure,� among others. Examples of each are included, and visitors can add their own in the comments on each page. It’s a great website to show clients when they ask you to implement a questionable “feature� on their website. (cc)

The Grammar Cheat Sheet

Creating and publishing content has never been easier. Many of us have stumbled across useful and inspiring websites, only to be shocked by the lack of even the most basic grammatical competency on the part of the author. Following a few simple pieces of advice to improve your copy does not take much effort. The Grammar Cheat Sheet by Alexander Ross Charchar serves as a great guide in the language jungle.

Grammar in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

Never mix up your dashes again; learn how to set quotations marks; and remind yourself to keep paragraphs short and topical. Overall, it’s a nice little catalog of suggestions that would help every content creator meet the expectations of their audience. Take five minutes to peruse the sheet; your visitors will appreciate it! For a closer look at what else might go wrong, check out “The Trouble With EM ’n EN (and Other Shady Characters)� by Peter K Sheerin. (sp)

WordPress Admin Toolbar Bookmarklet: Blogger’s Little Helper

Small yet efficient, the WP-Toolbar bookmarklet will save a lot of clicks as you edit or update posts on your WordPress-powered blog. The bookmarklet gives you quick access to the entire administrative back-end directly in your browser’s window.

Just drag and drop the bookmarklet into your bookmarks toolbar. When visiting your website, just click on the bookmarklet, and the script will add a graphical toolbar menu to the top-right corner. The menu has icons for all of the back-end menus, including Dashboard, Pages, Media and Users. To make it disappear, just re-click the WP-Toolbar button.

Wp-toolbar in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

Say you are reviewing a post from your blog and want to quickly add a picture: you don’t even have to navigate to the back end. Just click on the Media button and start directly uploading the image. (If you are not already logged in, you will need to do that first.)

The tool does not give you access to anything you don’t already have. And unfortunately, the WP Admin toolbar doesn’t allow you to edit a post or page that you have loaded in your browser: you will need to select it from the list of articles on the “Edit posts” page. Still, this tool will save you a couple of clicks by giving you quick access to the most important back-end options. There is also a GreaseMonkey script that automatically loads the toolbar when you visit a particular website. (mm)

Baker eBook Framework: Better eBooks for the iPad

The iPad has become the digital reading device of choice for many people, thanks in part to its iBooks app. However, how would one go about creating an eBook for iPad? Of course, there are many possibilities: you could just use InDesign, OpenOffice or Apple Pages to generate the book in the ePub format, however you may run into formatting problems.

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Baker eBook Framework is a nice new alternative. Based on HTML5, Baker makes creating a book for the iPad as easy as coding a basic Web page… even easier, considering it comes with a full framework for you to use. The idea is to give designers a set of templates to build HTML5 pages with a fixed width of 768px and use the power of WebKit for styling and animations. The format of Baker is HPub, which is basically one folder, book/, that contains all of your HTML files, all enumerated . It even comes with information on how to get your book into the App Store. It’s all free and BSD-licensed. You can download a sample book made in Baker for free. (cc) (vf)

Friends of Type

Friends of Type helps you discover great fresh visual content. Four creative fellows are responsible for the project which features type artwork from artists around the world, yet mainly their personal work. The project values typographic design and serves as a sketchbook, archive as well as dialogue.

Friends-of-type in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

All the creative posts are mainly meant to log ideas and aid you with daily inspiration. The posts are sketches and ideas around visualized language: a habit born out of the real-time collaboration among type artists. Don’t forget to drop by every last week of the month, when a guest designer is featured. (ik)

Responsive Images and Context-Aware Image Sizing

Since Ethan Marcotte coined the term, responsive Web design has gained a lot of attention in the Web design community, mainly due to its remarkable potential for flexible layouts that respond to the browser’s viewport for the best user experience. The main problem with such designs, however, is figuring out how to serve small images to mobile devices and tablets and large ones to desktop displays. At the most basic level, using fluid images and browser scaling to adjust the size of images would be fine, but it raises performance and speed issues.

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You could swap out different scaled images for different display sizes or use .htaccess files and some JavaScript to serve up different sized images based on the screen width. Another option is to use a service like TinySrc: merely prefix all large images in your source code with a TinySrc URL, and the tool does the rest.

Rumpetroll Experiment: Ever Wanted to Be a Tadpole?

Yeah, me neither. But that’s what Rumpetroll (Norwegian for “tadpole”) lets you do. The project is a multi-player experiment created with HTML5, Canvas, JavaScript and WebSockets. Rumpetroll lets you be a tadpole that swims around in a gigantic virtual pond. You can even chat with the other tadpoles.

Rumpetroll in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

While Rumpetroll doesn’t seem to have a real point, and we have no insight into why it was created, it is a very good example of what can be built with modern technologies such as HTML5 and Canvas. By the way, it’s a Github project, if you’re interested in diving into the code (pun totally intended). (cc)

Pop-Up Ping Pong

Developers are coming out with innovative games on what seems a daily basis. And sometimes we just need to take a break from our work and do something fun for a few minutes. Playing a quick game online is a great way to do this.

Pong in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

This new version of Pong is different from most online games. Rather than working in Flash or JavaScript, it works in pop-up windows. You get three pop-up windows to start. Two of the windows serve as sliders for the two players (you can play against another person or the computer) and one is the “ball.� You control your slider using the arrow keys or the A and Z keys. Other than that, it works just like an old-fashioned game of Pong. One tip: holding down a key to move seems to work very slowly (or not at all, at least on a Mac running Firefox); tapping the key repeatedly is better. Warning: sounds starts automatically. (cc)

Star Wars, Episode IV: Retold in Icons

Images can say more than words alone, and they can be a powerful tool for storytelling. Images engage and involve, they visualize data, and they condense large chunks of information in a compact and memorable way.

Star Wars is a legend. The story has been used for decades in a variety of ways: be it theatre performances or monochrome LEGO bricks, it still has a large and growing fan base. So while some fans are waiting for a new 3D version, there is now a convenient short form of the first part (which is the episode IV). And the best thing: it actually fits in this newsletter.

Starwars in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

Wayne Dorrington’s Star Wars: Episode IV presents the whole story of Star Wars: Episode IV in… icons! Not a single word is used in the design. A nice example of vivid, creative and original artwork. It’s also just fun to remember a great movie this way. (sl), (vf)

Subscribe Now!

As mentioned, our Smashing Newsletter has always been and will remain free of charge. Our main goal is to keep our readers up to date on the latest trends in this ever-growing world called Web design.

Join us today and become a member of the Smashing family!

Subscribe to the Smashing Email Newsletter Now!



(sl), (ik), (al)


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Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

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What do you do when you have an idea? Well, a good thing would be to write it down first. The next step would be to ask yourself how to actually implement it and bring it to life. With Adobe Photoshop, almost everything is possible. As you will see from these tutorials, it is a powerful tool for creating trendy designs as well as freshening up and editing graphics.

We’ve collected various types of artwork to match everyone’s taste. Whether you’re looking for a tutorial on how to create a honey text layout, a portfolio layout for your site or even how to undress a giraffe — it’s all here for you to explore. Hats off to all the creative designers who took their time in composing these great tutorials.

Create a Spherical 3D Puzzle With Photoshop
In this tutorial you will learn how to create a nice spherical 3D puzzle using Photoshop CS5 Extended’s 3D tools:

Photoshop7 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create an Underwater Typography Scene
This tutorial teaches you how to create a custom typography piece. We’ll be using custom brushes, light effects, and more to achieve the end result. Of course, the techniques can be applied to any typeface:

17 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

“Piece of the Artic� Pie Chart Photo Manipulation
In this tutorial, the artist shares his experience in recreating this illustration. This tutorial will utilize Photoshop 3D features, layer masking, and a lot of other selections:

8 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Spiral Telephone Cord From Scratch With Photoshop
In this tutorial you will learn how to create a still life telephone scene from scratch using the Smudge tool:

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Create a Vibrant Colorful Product Ad in Photoshop
In this tutorial you will learn how to create a vibrant colorful product advertisement in Adobe Photoshop using some easy techniques:

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Drawing a T-Shirt in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to draw a realistic T-shirt in photoshop:

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How to Mix Hand Drawing Sketch With Photo
In this tutorial, a nice unique photo effect from sketch can be created based on your photo:

Photoshop23 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Draw an Adidas Sneaker from Scratch in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to draw this Adidas sneaker in Photoshop. You’ll learn how to create the shape with the Pen tool and use different techniques for coloring and shading:

Photoshop24 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create A Stylish Dancer Photo Manipulation
In this tutorial, a stylish danceris created along with some photo manipulation added. You will learn a variety of Photoshop techniques working with different tools:

Photoshop17 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create an Rough Woody Text Effect with Wood Splinters Texture in Photoshop
In this tutorial, the artist illustrates how to create a rough woody text effect made of wood splinters with the help of Photoshop. Ground textures and dirt brushes are used as well to achieve special effects:

30 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create Awesome Abstract Nebula Circle Shape in Photoshop
In this tutorial, the artist shows the steps you need to take to create this abstract nebula circle shape. This is an intermediate level tutorial so some steps can be a little tricky for beginners, but why not have a try!

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Create a Dynamic Scene With Light Elements and Circles
Here you will learn how to create a colorful composition using Photoshop. You can also learn how to use different brush settings to fill out your canvas with nice random circle shapes:

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Create a Stunning Liquid Text Effect in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a gorgeous and stunning liquid text effect in Photoshop:

Photoshop15 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Design a Futuristic 2011 Wallpaper
Here are 16 easy-to-follow steps on how to design a futuristic wallpaper. In this tutorial the artist deals with layer masks and light effects. Also, you can see the power of layer styles and how they can be used to realize creative text effects:

6 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Draw an MP3 Player Skin
In this tutorial you can learn how to draw an MP3 player skin:

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How to Create a Classy Video Player in Photoshop
Learn how to create a classy video player; all you’ll need is a good-looking winter landscape, some beautiful minimalistic icons and various blending options to achieve a pixel-perfect and attractive media player interface:

28 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Facing a New Day – Photoshop Manipulation
In this manipulation tutorial the artist explains how you can create a really nice sunrise scene. The next step is how to transform a day picture into a sunrise one using some adjustment layers and gradient maps:

41 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Colorful Light Text Effect
In this tutorial, a nice bright colorful light text effect is created. Click here to find out how:

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Create an Amazing Abstract Heart Surreal Photoshop Tutorial
In this tutorial the artist illustrates how to create an unbelievable surreal abstract artwork with the help of Photoshop:

Photoshop9 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Create a Modern Heart Concept in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a modern heart concept in Photoshop:

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How to Draw a Realistic Modern Chair in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a realistic modern chair using the Pen and Smudge tools:

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Create an iPhone 4 in Photoshop
Here is a tutorial on how to create an iPhone 4 in Photoshop. We will use some basic drawing tools and layer effects to make it as realistic as possible:

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How to Draw a Photorealistic iPhone 4 in Photoshop
Here is another tutorial on how to create a photorealistic iphone 4 in Photoshop:

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Make a 3D Recycling Bin Icon with Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a ‘Recycling Bin’ icon with Photoshop:

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How to Create a Beautiful Printer Icon in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a beautiful printer icon in photoshop:

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Radar Icon in Photoshop
In this tutorial, the artist explains how to create a Mac style radar icon in Photoshop:

9 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Realistic Security Camera Effect in Photoshop
In this short tutorial, you can find out what techniques can be used to create highly realistic security camera effects using Photoshop. It’s a really effective and looks pretty realistic as you can see on the preview image:

42 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Design a Video Game Interface Window in Photoshop
In this tutorial the artist demonstrates how to design a video game interface window. During the process he shows you how to manually draw certain aspects, apply layer styles, textures, and even how to incorporate Adobe Illustrator:

10 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Master Custom Brushes
In this tutorial, you’ll find a way of moving away from the screen and creating your own brushes from scratch in some un-digital ways, using ink and brushes, before tweaking them for use in Photoshop:

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Balance Complex Abstract Images
This tutorial presents some necessary steps you need to take if you were to create balanced abstract images:

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Industrial Folder Style Icon
With the help of this tutorial you can learn how to create an industrial-styled folder icon:

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Stylise Photos Using Csolourful Shapes
In this tutorial the artist teaches you how to combine a neon-infused colour scheme with dynamic triangles and other shapes to achieve its eye-catching quality:

16 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Sleek Business Card Design From Scratch
In this detailed tutorial you can click your way through the process of creating a cool sleek business card from scratch using Adobe Photoshop CS5. The business card will also be print ready when finished designing:

14 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Professional App Store Web Layout
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a professional app store Web layout:

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Create a Gritty Portfolio Layout – Moleskine Layout
In this tutorial the artist will show you how to create a moleskine layout. This layout can be used for your portfolio, because it has the look of an open agenda:

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Create a Simple Clean Portfolio Layout in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a simple clean portfolio layout in Photoshop. A few important techniques discussed in this tutorial are the use of proper spacing, typography and colors:

47 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Rounded: Create a Detailed Solid Dark Layout in Photoshop
In this tutorial you will learn how to create a solid dark layout in Photoshop. A few techniques discussed in this tutorial include the use of proper spacing, typography, and colors:

35 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Create a Recipe Template in Photoshop
In this weblayout tutorial, you can learn how to create a nice recipe PSD template using some warm colors:

27 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Sleek Portfolio Layout
In this tutorial you’ll be walking through the process of how to create a sleek portfolio layout:

19 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Designing a Sleek, Dark Mobile App Website
In this tutorial the artist is using Adobe Photoshop to design a sleek Web interface that can be used for any mobile app website. Here you’ll be covering an array of techniques including shapes, textures, masks, custom icons, typography and much more that can be easily adapted and applied to your own Web designs:

22 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How To Create a Detailed Gauge Icon in Photoshop
In this tutorial you’ll be using various Photoshop layer styles to build up gradients and shadows to produce a detailed and realistic large scale icon, then modify and rebuild the icon into a range of typical icon sizes:

23 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Design a Fresh Web Service / SaaS Website Interface
In this tutorial you can learn how to design a clean and fresh interface that can be used for any Web service or SaaS-based Web app. The artist covers some trademark Web elements such as ribbons, buttons and stickers, as well as some basics including shapes, masks, typography, and much more:

24 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Learn To Create A Safe Illustration
In this tutorial you’ll see the process of creating a safe illustration:

20 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How To Give Your Photos a Vintage Polaroid Effect
Follow this step-by-step guide to give your photos a cool vintage Polaroid style effect. The artist adjusts the colours of the image with Adjustment layers then uses Photoshop brushes to distress the photograph for an aged appearance:

21 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Striking Nature Scene in Photoshop
In this tutorial the artist is going to show you how to create a nature-inspired design that is both organic and visually arresting. Here we’ll be covering some useful tips as we work through the process of creating a striking image:

25 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create Dramatic Meteor and Burning City Effect in Photoshop
In this tutorial, you can learn different methods on how to create a dramatic meteor and burning city image in Photoshop:

32 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Chrome 4×4 Vehicle Emblem
In this quick tip tutorial the artist demonstrates how to create a chrome 4×4 vehicle emblem using editable text and layer styles:

11 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Design an Angelic Style Owl Warrior with Abstract Patterns in Photoshop
In this tutorial, you can see the steps the artist took to create this angelic style owl warrior with the help of fractal brushes in Photoshop:

34 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

The Mad Hatter from Alice in Wonderland Photoshop Tutorial
In this tutorial you will see how you can create a new character from Alice in Wonderland:

36 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Textured Peeling Sticker
In this fun and simple tutorial, using simple tools such as the Eraser and Free-transform tool, the artist creates a textured sticker with a peeling effect:

37 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Learn How to Create the Watercolor Effect
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a watercolor effect on a photo. This is a quick tutorial but very useful for beginners as well as advanced Photoshop users:

38 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Making a Colorful Windows 7 Wallpaper in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to make your own Windows wallpaper. The artist explains how to create a Windows logo as a custom shape from an image. The benefit of using a custom shape in wallpapers is that you can change the size of the wallpaper without loosing quality:

40 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Snake Skin Text Effect in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can find out how to create a beautiful snake-like skin text effect in Photoshop:

45 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Photo Manipulation – “The Fourth Kind”
In this tutorial the artist explores combinations of different blend modes, manipulating lens flares, and displacing lines, to create this extraterrestial inspired sci-fi scene:

48 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create an Ancient Egyptian Tomb in Photoshop
In this tutorial you will learn how to create an cncient Egyptian tomb in Photoshop:

Photoshop1 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Realistic Computer Mouse
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a realistic computer mouse:

Photoshop2 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create Realistic Glossy Glass Tomatoes
In this tutorial, glass tomatoes with liquid in them will be created, along with reflections and shadows:

Photoshop3 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Draw a 3D Mailbox With Photoshop
In this tutorial we can learn how to create a 3D mailbox using several of Photoshop’s tools and techniques:

Photoshop6 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

The Making of “Climb� – An Awesome 3D Text Composition in Photoshop
In this tutorial, a 3D text is created with the use of Photoshop, along with a nice stylish background:

Photoshop19 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Create a Retro Aesthetic Poster in Photoshop
In this tutorial you’ll find out how to create a retro aesthetic poster using Photoshop:

Photoshop20 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Render a High Detail Leica M8 Camera with Photoshop
This is a very lengthy Photoshop tutorial that we will show you every step of the process:

Photoshop21 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Vibrant and Eye-Catching Drink Composition using Photoshop
In this tutorial you will learn how to create a Sobe fruit drink advertisement using some simple water stock images and a lot of easy-to-use techniques that will yield high quality results:

Photoshop22 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Golden Heart-Shaped Box
In this tutorial, an elegant, heart-shaped box will be created in Photoshop. Click here to find out how:

Photoshop25 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Draw a Wine Bottle in Photoshop
In this tutorial a realistic wine bottle is created from scratch using Photoshop’s wonders:

Photoshop30 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

How to Create a Beautiful Guitar Icon in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can find out how you can create your own wooden texture and create a guitar using the basic tools:

Photoshop31 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Shampoo Advertisement in Photoshop
In this tutorial you’ll learn how to create a shampoo advertisement wit the help of Photoshop:

Photoshop33 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Flowerpot From Scratch in Photoshop
In this tutorial, the artists elaborates how to create a flowerpot from scratch using several techniques that may already be familiar to you. Quite easy:

2 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create Advertisements with Posable Figurines Using Photoshop and iClone4
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a coffee shop advertisement using Photoshop and iClone4. The first part of this tutorial will show you how to create a swirling milky coffee. The second part will show you how to use iClone to put a 3D model inside the coffee:

Photoshop26 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Stylish Coffee Cup With Smart Objects
In this tutorial you can see how you can create a realistic coffee cup with a customizable label using smart objects in Photoshop:

Photoshop37 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Street Fighter Inspired Composition in Photoshop
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a grungy street fighter with a composition including light, photo and text effects:

Photoshop40 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a 3D Software Box in Photoshop Using Actions
In this tutorial the artist explains how you can create a 3D software box in Photoshop using Actions:

Photoshop39 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Honey Bubbles Text Effect
In this Photoshop tutorial you can learn how to create a warm honey text effect using the bubbles texture. Simple techniques are used, such as Layer Style effects and Honeycomb pattern:

Photoshop4 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a Scenic Castle Hallway in Photoshop
In this tutorial the artist combines stock photography and some basic digital painting techniques to create a scenic castle hallway in Photoshop:

7 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Falling Diamonds Wallpaper
In this tutorial you can learn how to create a stylish falling diamond wallpaper:

39 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Undress a Giraffe in Photoshop
Last but not least, a tutorial that demonstrates how to undress a giraffe by removing its spots. The artist shows you how to turn the spots into an outfit that will be draped over an ironing board:

1 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Milk Monster and Chocolate Splash
In this detailed tutorial you can find out how to create an amusing ‘milk monster’ and add a chocolate splash as well:

Photoshop12 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

Create a “Minionâ€� Character From the ‘Despicable Me’ Movie
Those of you who have watched the movie know how cute the characters are. In this tutorial, you can learn how to use Photoshop and Illustrator to create such a minion character:

5 in Photoshop Tutorials To Suit Your Taste

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