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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!

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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:

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

  • 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.

20things in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

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.

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

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.

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

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.

Paper2 in Smashing Email Newsletter Turns One Year Old: Comment and Win!

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.

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

#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.

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

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.

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

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)

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

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(sl), (ik), (al)


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Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

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We always try our best to challenge your artistic abilities and produce some interesting, beautiful and creative artwork. And as designers we usually turn to different sources of inspiration. As a matter of fact, we’ve discovered the best one — desktop wallpapers that are a little more distinctive than the usual crowd. This creativity mission has been going on for almost two years now, and we are very thankful to all designers who have contributed and are still diligently contributing each month.

We continue to nourish you with a monthly spoon of inspiration for the next 12 months. This post features 35 free desktop wallpapers created by artists across the globe for March 2011. Both versions with a calendar and without a calendar can be downloaded for free. It’s time to freshen up your wallpaper!

Please note that:

Rock’n'roll Hall Of Fame

"A tribute to some of the legends inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame." Designed by Gokul Nair from India.

Rocknroll Hof 7 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Troy

Designed by Zayeem Khan from India.

Troy 27 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Spring Is Coming

"A cute idea of a factory producing leaves in preparation for Spring." Designed by Jusna Begum from UK.

Spring Is Coming 11 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Evil Plants

"This wallpaper is made for celebrate 2011 spring." Designed by Sticky Stuff from France.

Evil Plants 36 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Daydream

"A daydream is a visionary fantasy, especially one of happy, pleasant thoughts, hopes or ambitions, imagined as coming to pass, and experienced while awake." Designed by Bruna Suligoj from Croatia.

Daydream 69 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Forbidden City

"Illustration from on an original photograph of the Forbidden City, Beijing, China." Designed by Nic Dipalma from USA.

Forbidden City 28 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Good Time Cyclones

"Las Vegas, Nevada." Designed by Brad Cerasani from Canada.

Good Time Cyclones 78 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Creative Bubbles

"Creative Bubbles." Designed by Avish Khan from Pakistan.

Creative Bubbles 58 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

There And Back Again

Designed by Becky Rother from USA.

Tolkein 79 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

March Hare

"Air in March is full of spring and it makes us see amazing things." Designed by Olivia Osik from Estonia.

March Hare 93 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Spring Is Here

"Let’s put away the winter coats and start enjoying the beautiful outdoors!" Designed by Corporate 3 Design from USA.

Spring 35 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Ah, Russia – The Famous Trio

Designed by Tihomir Budic from BiH-Republika Srpska.

Famous Trio 77 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Galanthus Nivalis

"March is the first month of spring that we all looking forward to." Designed by Cheloveche.ru from Russia.

Galanthus Nivalis 13 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Chinese Impression

"Chinese opera always leave a deep impression on people. It always bring us the enjoyment of beauty." Designed by Lijingwen from China.

Chinese Impression 29 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Close To Paradise

"Mesa, Arizona." Designed by Brad Cerasani from Canada.

Close To Paradise 27 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

There’s Always Hope

"When the dust settles and the rumbling ceases, we are able to see clearly once more. Faith in a new start pushes us forward despite our losses. Hope for a new horizon is a warming reality in which we can find assurance. We will discover love in unexpected places, and with a little luck we make it to the dawn of a new day." Designed by Elevendy from USA.

Always Hope 53 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Pi Day

Designed by Felix Grossar from Austria.

Pi 25 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Playing Indoors

"Momma always said not to play indoors. Nothing a little glue and a vacuum cleaner can’t fix." Designed by Mad Sprocket from USA.

Playing Indoors 25 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Anantara

"Path to the beach at dusk, Phuket Thailand." Designed by Aaron Christe from Thailand.

Anantara 21 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

All Is Full Of Love

"All is full of love is a project about the lifes of 200 calendars. For the past five years, Denitsa Boyadzieva has been lovingly creating her clay and paper “walldolls” and featuring them on her blog. Each with its own character and story. ." Designed by Graphic Design Studio Punkt from Bulgaria.

Allisfulloflove 88 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

The White Stripes

"This wallpaper is a little tribute to one of the best bandof the last decade: The White Stripes. After I’ve heard thenews of their decision to make no longer music together,my theme for the march wallpaper was born. I’ve been inspiredby the “Seven Nation Army” video. Hope you like it!" Designed by Marco Palma from Italy/Germany.

The White Stripes 20 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Usher In The Year Of The Rabbit

"In the land of the shadows the “hare-ry” hand is king. Guised as the bringer of easter, mischief only awaits. So hide your eggs of chocolates and such from the hand dressed as a hare, whence come next year you’d have nothing to bare." Designed by Siewhui from Singapore.

Hand 82 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Sweet March

"Digital collage, based on past and coming spring. The idea is to make it eternal or at least make it eternal in our computers! Hope you like it." Designed by Soledad Martelletti from Argentina.

Sweet March 75 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Listen To March

"Just listen to March, the beautiful spring month~." Designed by Kayro C from China.

Listen To March 37 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Mimesis Art Prints

"Crossed Wires photographed by Lia Laroye. Calendar designed by Denis Leblanc." Designed by Mimesis Art Prints from Canada.

Mimesis 45 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Breath Of Spring

"We waited the spring for a long time . And now we can take a deep breath and enjoy the flavor of the coming spring. It’s time to wake up!" Designed by Oxana Kostromina from Poland/Russia.

Breath Of Spring 20 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Creative Juice

"Let your creative juices flow!" Designed by Junior Rumbelow from England.

Creative Juice 42 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

March Flying

"March is the time when you can spread your wings and welcome the first rays of sun." Designed by Jaro Mlkvy from Slovakia.

March Flying 32 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Lion & Lamb

"March; In like a lion, out like a lamb." Designed by Brian Hauck from USA.

Lion Lamb 16 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Formula 1

"We love Formula 1 at Fluid Creativity, in fact, we’re so excited that we’ve kicked off the F1 season by designing this desktop calendar for March 2011 for all of the Smashing Mag fans to download. ." Designed by Fluid Creativity from England.

Formula1 53 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Spring

"Spring is almost here!" Designed by Agnes Swart from The Netherlands.

Spring 23 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Spring Is Coming

"The weather is getting a little warmer, some birds fly, spring is not here yet, but it’s coming soon." Designed by Fabrizio Giammatteo from Italy.

Spring Is Coming 22 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Three

"Winter has left the city. Maybe?!" Designed by Lotum from Germany.

Three 90 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Save The Date

"Tunisia and Egypt revolution… The beauty of freedom in two colors Red and Black." Designed by Sahra Tamo from Syria.

Black Save The Date 81 in Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: March 2011

Join in next month!

Please note that we respect and carefully consider the ideas and motivation behind each and every artist’s work. This is why we give all artists the full freedom to explore their creativity and express emotions and experience throughout their works. This is also why the themes of the wallpapers weren’t anyhow influenced by us, but rather designed from scratch by the artists themselves.

A big thank you to all designers for their participation. Join in next month!

What’s your favorite?

What’s your favorite theme or wallpaper for this month? Please let us know in the comment section below.

(ik) (vf)


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New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost Files

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With the growing popularity of smartphones and tablet devices, our readers keep asking us for more convenient ways to read Smashing Magazine’s content online and offline. We are listening, and we’ve been making our content available as digital eBooks in our shop. The eBooks contain selections of articles that were published on Smashing Magazine in 2010 and 2011, as well as some exclusive articles. The previously published articles have, however, been revised, polished and carefully edited and prepared for the eBook versions (in PDF, ePUB and Mobipocket formats).

We are glad to present the three new eBooks that were released just recently.

Professional Web Design, Volume 2 (eBook #7)

This eBook is the second part of the best-selling eBook #1. It contains 20 articles that cover current Web design trends, responsive Web design, user experience design, HTML5, usability and prototyping. The eBook describes existing and upcoming trends and explains how Web design could evolve in the coming months and years. It also touches on what Web designers should be ready for to keep abreast of new challenges and opportunities.

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Download the eBook:

Professional Web Design, Volume 2 is available in PDF, ePub and Mobipocket formats. It is, as always, DRM-free and costs just $9.90.

Getting The Hang Of Web Typography (eBook #6)

Getting the Hang of Web Typography is dedicated to Web workers who deal with typography in their daily lives but have no special training for this distinct craft. This eBook gives you the necessary background on macro- and microtypography, helping you to choose suitable fonts and use modern techniques such as Web font embedding. It’s a valuable book that will help you create rich, sophisticated websites with beautiful and elegant Web typography.

6-cover in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost Files

Download the eBook:

This eBook is available in PDF, ePub and Mobipocket formats. It is, as always, DRM-free and costs just $9.90.

Check Out Our Free eBook!

If you would prefer to try out an eBook first instead of buying a “pig in a poke,� please feel free to download our free eBook “The Lost Files.� Initially, the Smashing Book 2 was supposed to contain more chapters, but because most of our contributors delivered (much) more content than the book’s size could accommodate, we couldn’t include them all. So, we released four chapters as a free bonus eBook, called “The Lost Files.�

To download your free copy, just register an account in the Smashing Shop, and go to My Profile → My Downloadable Products. You don’t have to buy anything: registration is free and takes just few seconds.

Lost-files in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost Files

New Bundle

You can also get the latest five books in the Smashing eBook series by buying them as a bundle. All books are available in PDF, ePUB and Mobipocket formats:

Why Would Anyone Buy An eBook?

Good question. While so much content is available online for free, eBooks tend to feel a bit more permanent, secure and reliable and are often much better optimized for reading than Web pages. eBooks are usually carefully edited, organized and prepared. Compared to printed books, eBooks present many advantages:

  • Immediately available
    You can purchase, download and start reading eBooks within minutes. You do not have to travel to a bookstore to buy them, nor do you have to wait days or weeks for them to arrive by mail.
  • Portable
    You can carry all of your books with you on a laptop, smartphone or eBook reader, without worrying about weight. Also, being so small in file size, they are much more convenient for reading offline and on smartphones.
  • Adaptable
    Modern eBook formats (ePUB, Mobipocket) are designed with reflowable text, which means that the presentation of content is optimized for the display it is being viewed on.
  • Searchable
    With built-in search functionality, you can easily search for keywords and even long passages of text.
  • Interactive
    Digital books are able to contain audio and video, which can complement or add to the message of the authors.
  • Adjustable font size
    Users of eBook readers can easily increase the font size of books and sometimes even change the font itself, which makes the format ideal for the elderly and people with disabilities. Also, with the emergence of high-resolution displays, digital text can appear very sharp and crisp on the screen, very much like ink on paper.
  • Bookmarks, highlighting and notes
    Advanced eBook readers automatically remember where you’ve stopped reading whenever you close a book. They also allow you to bookmark pages, highlight favorite passages and make notes.
  • Built-in dictionary
    Some eBook readers offer a built-in dictionary, which are especially helpful to non-native speakers.
  • Text-to-speech functionality
    The latest eBook readers have built-in text-to-speech functionality, which is particularly useful on small mobile devices. Rest your eyes after a long day in front of the computer.

All Smashing eBooks: Overview

Here is what we have to offer. All eBooks are available in PDF, ePUB and Mobipocket formats, and they are free of DRM.

Bundle-thumbnail in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FilesSmashing eBook Bundle — #3, 4, 5, 6 and 7$39.50
Lost-files-smalll in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FilesThe Lost Files, an extra free goodie for Smashing Book 2free!
Ebook-7 in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FileseBook #7: Professional Web Design, Volume 2$9.90 (new!)
Typography-small in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FileseBook #6: Getting the Hang of Web Typography$9.90 (new!)
Ecommerce802 in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FileseBook #5: How to Create Selling E-Commerce Websites$9.90
Mobile-80x80 in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FileseBook #4: Mobile Design for iPhone and iPad$9.90
80x80-4photoshopforweb1 in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FileseBook #3: Mastering Photoshop for Web Design$9.90
80x80-3freelancing1 in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FileseBook #2: Successful Freelancing for Web Designers$4.95 (reduced price)
80x80-1prowebdesign1 in New Smashing eBooks: Professional Design, Web Typography, Lost FileseBook #1: Professional Web Design$4.95 (reduced price)

Thank you, guys. We sincerely appreciate your feedback and support.

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Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

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We know how hard it is to find good useful tools that all of your developers and designers out there spend hours searching for. And for that reason, we’re regularly collecting useful online web services, tools and resources — little time-savers that can boost every designer’s workflow and save time that would otherwise be required for mundane tasks.

You might have seen some of these tools in our Twitter stream or on our Facebook page, but certainly not all of them. We’ve prepared the most useful ones (yet not necessarily the most beautiful ones) in this handy overview for your convenience. Please share any further tools with us and our readers in the comments to this post. As usual, we express sincere gratitude to all designers and developers out there who create, maintain and improve these tools as their little side projects. You really make the difference, guys. Thank you.

You may want to check out our previous round-up, Time-Saving and Educational Resources for Web Designers, as well.

Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources

FontFuse: Gallery of Font Pairings
FontFuse is a font pairing design resource that displays font pairings and hence helps you compare and choose fonts. You can browse through fonts as well as font families, and explore the most recent, most popular and contest-leading font pairings.

Useful-web-services101 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Little Big UI Details
This site features tiny details that improve the user experience of websites and mobile apps. You’ll find some useful design techniques found by your colleagues across the Web. Also, share your favorite little things on the website as well. The collection is already very useful, with more design examples submitted every single day.

Useful-tool-115 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

A Sampler Page
While physical books are traditionally well defined and structured objects, digital books live on screens that vary greatly in their dimensions. In this A List Apart article, Craig Mod dives into the similarities and differences of these media and presents the baseline for designers who want to produce beautiful and readable text on a tablet.

Useful-tool-127 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Readability: Enjoy Reading, Support Writing
Another handy little helper that gets rid of the unwanted clutter. Readability allows you to choose your preferred settings (font size, margin and style) and applies them to any website. Drag the bookmarklet with your saved settings into your bookmars bar or folder, visit the website of your choice, click on the bookmarklet and you get a good, comfortable read. Besides, readability offers a way to compensate writers and publishers without punishing readers. 70% of all membership fees go directly to the people who make the content.

Useful-tool-132 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Prey: Rest Safe
This tool is small but efficient open-source application that lets you track your laptop or phone in case it gets stolen or lost. Once the Prey agent is installed, it waits to be activated over the Web or via SMS, sending back information on its exact position.

Prey in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Ge.tt
With Ge.tt you can turn any type of file into web content and share it instantly. You just click on and select files and share the files with your friends or publish the data online. You may want to check an alternative, Crate, as well.

Useful-tool-121 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Lanyrd: Get More Out of Conferences
Lanyrd is the social conference directory that lets you keep track of what is going on around you, both as a conference speaker and visitor. You can browse conferences by topic, see who the keynote speakers are and who might like to attend it with you. Follow intereresting conferences by checking out attendees tweets or browse slide, videos and podcasts of past events you might have missed. And you can check SmashingMag’s account on Lanyrd, too.

Useful-tool-102 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Dashkards: Dashboard Cheat Sheets For Your Favorite Mac Apps
The site presents keyboard shortcut cheatsheets for you favorite Mac apps to help you memorize them. Simply add the dashkards to your dashboard and save time.

Useful-tool-124 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Bundler: Manage Your Application’s Dependencies
Bundler manages application’s dependencies through many machines systematically and repeatedly. You can use the tool with frameworks (it works out of the box with Rails 3) and check out an application with a gemfile for development. A detailed instruction is available on the app’s main web page.

Bundler in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

BuildorPro
BuildorPro runs through your browser, and so the browser becomes your development environment — meaning that every time you change your code by hand or through the visual tools, the changes are instantly reflected in the design window. Currently in beta.

157-useful in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Zerply: Present Yourself Professionally
With Zerply you can present yourself, discover and connect as well as converse and collaborate. By setting up a professional profile, you can tell people who you are and what sites you use.

Useful-tool-118 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Prevue: Sharing Tool for Designers
Prevue is a free concept sharing tool that helps you upload in a simple and elegant way by organizing and sharing your work with others. Either share individual projects with clients, or turn all your projects and designs into a beautiful and clean portfolio to share with the world.

Useful-tool-134 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Git Immersion
Git is a fast version control system which can be downloaded on this site. Git Immersion is a very detailed guide to Git, with examples and practical tips for developers.

Useful-tool-125 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Wirify: The Web as Wireframes
This tool is a bookmarklet that lets you turn any Web page into a wireframe with a single click. The bookmarklet helps you get rid of all distractions by blocking out copy, images and ads, letting you take a closer look at the website’s building blocks. Wirify is a useful tool that shows the balance of a website that the eye perceives only unconsciously.

Wireframe in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Open with Photoshop Firefox Extension
If you are looking for nifty time-savers, this little Firefox add-on is the perfect companion for any Web or graphic designer. Instead of saving images first, you can just open them directly in Photoshop via a single click. If Photoshop is already running, it opens the image in a new window; otherwise, it launches the program.

Open-with-photoshop in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Scr.im: Email Address Shortener
Scr.im lets you use a shortened URL to give out your email address safely and securely in forums. Just enter your email address on Scr.im, and it gives you a link to a page with your email address, with security to prevent bots from viewing it.

Scrim in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Compfight: Flickr Search Engine
Compfight is a Flickr search engine for images licensed under Creative Commons (or other) licenses. They pull their results directly from Flickr and gives you multiple options to restrict your search.

Useful-tool-103 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Browserling: Interactive Cross-browser Testing in Your Browser
Browserling offers you a graphical web console to do cross-browser testing without leaving your own browser. A helpful way to try out your creations. The virtual browsers run live enabling you to type and click away just as if you were running the actual browser. Paid and free options are available.

106-useful in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

User Feedback and Concept Testing with Verify
Verify is the fastest way to collect and analyze user feedback on screens or mockups. See where people click, what they remember, or how they feel about a Web design.

146-useful in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

foxGuide: Photoshop Guides Inside Firefox
foxGuide is a Firefox extension that displays horizontal and vertical guides. These guides appear as thin lines that float over the webpage. You can move or remove them just the way you do it in Photoshop.

147-useful in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

GridBookmarklet
The tool allows you to interact with a grid directly inside the Web browser. (Most alternatives involve overlaying a static grid image onto the page.) Just drag it to your bookmarks toolbar, and then any time you want to check that everything is properly aligned, click on the bookmarklet, and a grid will be overlaid on the current page.

Grid2 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

URLi.st: Share and Sync Your Links
URList not only enables you to create and save link lists easily and share them via Twitter or email with coworkers and friends, but also lets you access those links from anywhere. And creating lists is dead easy. Just drag URList’s bookmarklet to your browser’s bookmark bar and click it whenever you want to add a link to the group of links.

Useful-tool-114 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Spritebox: Create CSS from Sprite Images
Spritebox is a WYSIWYG tool to help Web designers create CSS classes and IDs from a single sprite image. It is easy and free to use and is based on the principle of using the background-position property to align areas of a sprite image into block elements of a Web page. You may want to check out CSS Sprite Generator, too.

162-useful in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Joliprint
This is an online tool that generates PDFs from Web pages. Granted, it is not the only tool that does this, but it is easy to use and versatile. People can use it as a bookmarklet, pulling it into the Favorites toolbar of their browser and clicking as needed. Joliprint generates a clear, reader-friendly two-column layout, free of ads and navigation elements, and it does it pretty well. Sometimes it removes too much content, though, such as readers’ comments. If you’d like an alternative, give Web2PDF or Notforest a try.

Jolly in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Entitifier
Cleaning up text for the Web can be time-consuming and prone to error. But if a client delivers content in Microsoft Word or a similar format, then cleaning it up is a necessary evil if you don’t want to end up with characters that don’t display properly online. Entitifier does the hard work for you. All you have to do is enter HTML or text, and it escapes nasty characters that should be entities. Just don’t enter text with inline PHP or HTML5 tags, because the tool doesn’t work well with them yet.

The Email Address Obfuscation Debate
Superuser has an interesting discussion about email obfuscation, with opinions from a number of users. Included also are different techniques for accomplishing obfuscation, empirical data about its effectiveness and links to other discussions and articles. One interesting technique is to use the obscure unicode-bidi and direction CSS properties and write the email address backwards: for example, moc.elpmaxe@zyx. Plenty of interesting ideas worth learning and discussing. (cc)

Email in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Quick CSV Data Convertor
As Web designers, we constantly receive data in Excel and other spreadsheet formats. This works fine when you just need to view the data on your computer. But when you need to upload it to and display it on the client’s website, it becomes a huge pain. This tool takes a CSV or tab-delimited file in Excel and converts it to JSON, XML, ActionScript and other Web-friendly formats instantly. If you want to convert your spreadsheet data to HTML, you might want to give Tableizer a try.

Instant Blueprint
Instant Blueprint is a way to create a web project framework. In a very short time you can get your project up and running with valid HTML/XHTML and CSS. It’s a simple online form where you enter the required information and markup id tags. Then you select options such as, javascript library and document type. This then generates the blueprint you need to get your project going.

Interaction-Design.org: HCI, IxD, UX, IA, Usability, and More
This website is a growing library of documents, references and useful articles about interaction design. Leading personalities of the respective branches are asked to contribute to every topic including videos and commentaries.

jQuery Deconstructed
The Deconstructed series is designed to visually and interactively deconstruct the internal code of JavaScript libraries, including jQuery, Prototype and MooTools.

Last Click

Humans.txt: We are People, Not Machines
Humans.txt is an initiative founded by a group of Spanish enthusiasts with the idea to give credit to the humans behind Web projects. Start your own humans.txt now and stick it in the website’s root folder, right next to robots.txt. Fill the file with whatever info about the contributors you like. Be a part of the initiative and help establish the standard for humans.txt.

Spacelog Apollo 13
This site allows you to explore transcripts of radio communications between the Apollo 13 crew and the NASA personnel back at Houston. You can check out photographs taken from the ground as well as by the crew in space. If you’re interested in space missions and the history of Apollo 13, this is the site for you.

Spacelog in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Google Art Project
The Google Art Project lets you visit all the great museums around the world and offers interactive 360° tours. High zoom levels give you astounding close-up impressions of the masterpieces, getting that close would probably be impossible in reality. You can even create your own virtual tour and showcase your own great tableaus.

Web-services-010 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

Liveset: Now the Concert Comes To You
This service allows you to watch live concerts on the Web and on mobile devices in HD. Once you’ve become a member, you can claim digital tickets and enjoy the show on your large screen at home, together with your friends or family.

170-useful in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

How To Build a Corporate Website (Comic Strip)
Unfortunately, very sad, yet very true.

Sad-true in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers

How Would You Like Your Graphic Design?
A nice Venn diagram that helps you (and maybe your client) resolve dilemma on getting fast, cheap, free and great graphic design. Pick two out of four.

Web-services-008 in Useful Web Services, Tools and Resources For Web Designers


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The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

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The Smashing Book 2 is here. It’s printed. It’s available. And it’s being delivered worldwide at this very moment as you are reading this. All pre-ordered books have been sent out from our warehouse via air mail and should reach all countries soon. In fact, some readers have already received a copy of the book. What didn’t work the first time with the Smashing Book 1 has been hopefully accomplished this time. We’ve worked very hard to produce a high quality, valuable book for you, guys. So here it is, the brand new printed hardcover Smashing Book 2.

Sm-book11 461px in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Sm-book10 461px in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Inside-book in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Button-sm-book-buy in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

What’s In The Book?

The Smashing Book 2 is a printed book about best practices in modern Web design. The book shares valuable practical insight into design, usability and coding. It provides professional advice for designing mobile applications and building successful e-commerce websites, and it explains common coding mistakes and how to avoid them.

You’ll explore the principles of professional design thinking and graphic design and learn how to apply psychology and game theory to create engaging user experiences. We also feature interviews from experts on the future of Web typography and describe how you can publish a book on your own.

Well-respected professionals have worked with us to provide exciting and comprehensive chapters:

  • “The Principles of Great Graphic Design,â€� Matt Ward and Alexander Charchar,
  • “Visible vs. Invisible Design (free PDF sample)â€�, Francisco Inchauste,
  • “Designing Mobile User Experiences,â€� Mike Rundle,
  • “Sketching, Wireframing and Prototyping,â€� Janko Jovanovic,
  • “Red Flags in Web Development,â€� Christian Heilmann,
  • “The Future of Web Typography,â€� Vivien Anayian,
  • “Game Design Techniques Applied to UX Design,â€� Christoph Kolb,
  • “When They Click: Psychology of Web Design,â€� Susan Weinschenk,
  • “Design Patterns on E-Commerce Websites (A Study),â€� Steven Bradley,
  • “How to Make a Book (Like This One),â€� The Smashing Magazine Team.

You will find more information below, and you can read a sample chapter—“Visible vs. Invisible Design� (PDF, 5.6 MB) by Francisco Inchauste—for free.

Exclusive Artwork for the Book

The Smashing Book 2 features exclusive full-page illustrations for each chapter. And this is something special we’ve got for you. The illustrations were created by the talented Australian illustrator and our dear friend Yiying Lu, who is well known as the designer of the famous “Twitter Fail Whale.â€� She has designed an exclusive new series called “Smashing Animalsâ€� for this book. (And by the way, you can purchase it as wall art on Yiying’s website.)

Sm-book4 500px in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

The Names of Our Readers and an Exclusive Poster

In November 2010, our readers and fans had the opportunity to add their names to the book. We sorted through all of the participants alphabetically and created an exclusive double-page feature on pages 6 and 7. Overall, 2970 names form the “S� in Smashing—ASCII art at its best.

We’ve selected the winners of the A3 poster (.txt) as promised. And to make the poster a bit more special, we decided to put the entire contents of the book—every single word—in the poster. Take a look at the (large) preview of the poster (JPEG, 8 MB). The posters are being sent out at this very moment.

The Smashing Book 2 Is Available Exclusively In The Smashing Shop

… and nowhere else. The Smashing Book 2 is a hardcover book with quality stitched binding, 360 pages and a size that is a bit larger than its predecessor. The price is again just $29.90. Also, we want to make the book affordable for everyone, so Smashing Magazine will pay a large part of the shipping costs and ship the books at the fixed price of $3.50/€3.50 per copy, no matter where you live in the world.

Shop in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!
The new Smashing Shop.

And it gets even better: the book will be sent only via air mail (except within Germany). Delivery will take between 3 and 15 working days at most (you can check delivery times for your country), and it will ship from Berlin, Germany. Of course, if you are not satisfied or have questions, there is a 100-day money-back guarantee and a live chat in our recently redesigned Smashing Shop.

But That’s Not All, Right?

Right! Initially, the book was supposed to contain more chapters, but because most of our contributors delivered (much) more content than the book’s size could accommodate, we couldn’t include it all. (We could have added more pages, but then shipping costs would have increased significantly.) So, we are releasing four chapters as a free bonus eBook, called “The Lost Files.â€� This 140-page eBook is now available in PDF, ePUB and Mobipocket formats. Every registered user can download the book for free, no strings attached.

To download your free copy, just register in the Smashing Shop and go to My profile → My downloadable products. You can download the free eBook there. Again, you don’t have to buy anything: registration is free and takes just 30 seconds.

Lost-files in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

The free bonus eBook contains the following exclusive chapters:

  • “The Ultimate Web Design Questionnaire and Checklist,â€� by Kat Neville,
  • “Plagues in Web Design and How to Deal With Them,â€� by Speider Schneider,
  • “Interviews: Expert Tips From Renowned Designers,â€� by Steven Snell,
  • “Web Design Community: Where Are We Going?,â€� by Paul Scrivens (Drawar).

Features Of The Book

  • Solid hardcover,
  • Quality stitched binding with a red bookmark,
  • 360 pages with full-color images on coated paper,
  • Worldwide availability,
  • Reduced air mail shipping (just $3.50/€3.50 per copy),
  • Smashing packaging,
  • Risk-free purchase with a 100-day money-back guarantee,
  • Free eBook with four bonus chapters (140 pages),
  • Buy the book now for just $29.90!

Button-sm-book-buy in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

A Closer Look At The Book’s Chapters

Chapter 1: The Principles of Great Graphic Design, by Matt Ward and Alexander Charchar
This chapter looks at some key concepts of graphic design as they relate to modern Web design. It looks at a number of the central elements and methodologies that drive the act of designing itself, and it discusses the sometimes subtle but always significant divide between the merely good and truly great. You can read details about the writing of this chapter in Alexander Charchar’s article “Working Hard to Leap Buildings.â€�

This chapter is about: The meaning of graphic design. The difference between good and great design. Timeless design. Relational minimalism. Importance of contrast, space and tension. Typography. Visual voice.

Smbook Chapter 1 in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Chapter 2: Visible vs. Invisible Design, by Francisco Inchauste
Basic principles and techniques of producing the visible layer of design in tools such as Photoshop are widely covered in books and online. Design is generally understood to be only what we see: a visual and primarily artistic medium of communication. However, the invisible part of design takes on several forms. When we design a website or application, we don’t (and shouldn’t) start from scratch. We start with certain patterns, and we need to understand their limitations in order to create effective solutions and experiences. Balancing invisible and visible designs enables us to create effective and meaningful interfaces for websites and applications.

This chapter is about: Seeing the invisible in design. Designing how users think. Mental models. Excise design. Design patterns and interface guidelines.

Smbook Chapter 2 in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Chapter 3: Designing Mobile User Experiences, by Mike Rundle
The best apps work well, but building an app that looks good and works well isn’t easy. Designing a mobile app’s user experience is particularly challenging because it requires skill in a variety of disciplines: interaction design, graphic design, information architecture and ergonomics, to name a few. User experience design is a combination of disciplines, and so designing a fantastic mobile app calls for a combination of perspectives and skills.

This chapter is about: Building and selling apps. Peculiarities of mobile software. Principles of good app design. User interface design patterns for mobile apps. Visual design of mobile apps.

Smbook Chapter 3 in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Chapter 4: Sketching, Wireframing and Prototyping, by Janko Jovanovic
Every design process starts with an idea. Many ideas, actually. The truth is, only a few of them prove to be good, and the others are just bad. Many people believe that they have an excellent idea and know the path to realizing it, yet most fail. And that’s not surprising, because having an idea is not enough. Knowing how to choose an idea, shape it and develop it is crucial to success. This chapter describes the process of moving from abstract ideas to concrete solutions and explains the workflow, tools and techniques available when designing websites and user interfaces.

This chapter is about: Design process. Ideation through sketching. Storyboards. Techniques and tools. Wireframing. Prototyping. Testing and refining.

Smbook Chapter 4 in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Chapter 5: Red Flags (Warning Signs) in Web Development, by Christian Heilmann
We spend a big part of our lives working hard to clean up and maintain products, rather than building great things to make the lives of our users easier. That’s just the way it is. If your code is hard to clean up, then you’ll be eating up even more time in the already short development process. Discovering that the product you’re having trouble extending or fixing is your own from some time ago is all the more aggravating. That’s when you start thinking that something must have gone wrong along the way. Well, something has. A few things will make good solutions go bad and start to smell, and this chapter goes over them.

This chapter is about: Building for maintenance, not the moment. Why HTML and CSS code goes bad. HTML painting and convoluted CSS syntax. Issues with JavaScript and back-end code.

Smbook Chapter 5 in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Chapter 6: The Future of Web Typography, by Vivien Anayian
In the foreword to The Elements of Typographic Style, Robert Bringhurst points out that the underlying principles of typography are independent of any particular typesetting medium. Yet it is only after almost 20 painful years of setting type on the Web that designers can finally breathe better and apply the essential elements of style without compromising on detail or execution. Recent years have been pivotal in shaping the future of typography on the Web; what was unthinkable only a few years ago has become possible today, and it will get even better tomorrow.

You can read details about the writing of this chapter in Yves Peters’ short article “Some Thoughts On Web Fonts.â€� The following typography experts generously contributed their time and expertise for this chapter:

This chapter is about: Evolution of Web typography. @font-face. WOFF. The open-source type movement. Font licensing. Web font services. Current problems in Web typography. Fonts Module and CSS3. Exclusive interviews.

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Chapter 7: Applying Game Design Principles to User Experience Design, by Christoph Kolb
The ultimate goal of a business is simple: to engage as many people as possible in favorable interactions. These interactions could include buying a product, spreading the word, advertising or just generally becoming a fan. Such objectives clearly require us to explore paradigms and perspectives that go far beyond aesthetics and traditional user interaction. This is where game design theory comes in handy. We can apply game design to certain areas of interaction to create user experiences that engage people and bind them to the company. In this chapter, we will learn how to apply some of techniques and theories of game design to website design, user experience and business.

This chapter is about: Combining social psychology, game design theory and economics. Game mechanics: world, players and rules. Winning strategies for users and companies. Playbook and strategy for interaction designers. Game design techniques and real-life examples.

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Chapter 8: When They Click: Psychology of Web Design and User Behavior, by Susan Weinschenk
From the chapter: “I’m a psychologist by training and education. This means that I consider design in the context of the mental model of the user. Whether the design is of software, a website, a medical device, online instructions or product packaging, I can’t help but see it from a psychologist’s point of view. I enjoy applying what psychology research tells us about how people think, learn, play and work to design challenges. I take research and insight into the brain, the visual system, memory and motivation and extrapolate design principles from them.�

This chapter is about: Different views on design. The importance of social interactions. Unconscious decision-making. Social validation. Goal-gradient effect. Using distractions to grab attention. “Satisficing.� Mental models. Error handling. Inattentional blindness.

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Chapter 9: Design Patterns in E-Commerce Websites (Study), by Steven Bradley
Designers of e-commerce websites have to take into account many things that designers of informational websites don’t. How to design the check-out process? How will the website establish trust so that visitors are willing to hand over sensitive credit card data? Common design patterns have evolved over time, and this chapter explores how well e-commerce websites match up with theory and best practices. What’s the average number of check-out pages for an e-commerce website? Do certain patterns emerge from the data to show how different websites approach such issues? Shopping websites were chosen and surveyed each based on a set of elements in several categories.

This chapter is about: Layout. Information architecture. Navigation. Color. Product, check-out and shopping cart pages. Wording and design of call-to-action buttons. Contact and support pages. On-site marketing.

Smbook Chapter 9 in The Smashing Book 2 Is Available: Get Yours Now!

Chapter 10: How to Make a Book (Like This One), by The Smashing Editorial Team
Holding your very own book in your hands for the first time is a truly remarkable experience. You suddenly realize that you’ve given your ideas—ideas conceived in some abstract state in your mind—a certain shape, a physical reality, making them tangible, visible and enduring. The feeling is overwhelming: it fills your heart with pride, in the way that a painter admires their creation. The feeling has not been alien to those who have participated in book manufacturing over the centuries, and yet experiencing it has never been so affordable and accessible as it is now.

This chapter is about: Printing a book on your own or with a publishing house. Writing, editing and preparing the book for printing. Pricing, marketing and fulfillment. eBook production: PDF, ePUB, Mobipocket. Print on demand.

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FAQ

Here are some frequently asked questions and answers related to The Smashing Book 2.

Contents and Format of The Smashing Book 2

  • What’s the difference between The Smashing Books 1 and 2?
    Both books cover best practices in Web design and development, and they have similarities, but on a broad scale they cover different areas of design. Book 1 presents coding and layout techniques, color theory und UI design, while Book 2 covers psychology, designing for mobile devices, graphic design, wireframing and book production. They complement each other very well but are also distinct enough for standalone reading.
  • Is The Smashing Book 2 an update, a new edition or a completely new book?
    The content was written from scratch, specifically for the book. It’s a completely new book.
  • Is The Smashing Book 2 available as an eBook?
    No. We don’t want it to be just one of the many books available everywhere. Rather, we want it to be an exclusive annual event. Our goal was to print a large, unique, comprehensive and highly valuable physical book with unique packaging. We don’t have any plans to release it as an eBook.
  • What’s with the extra eBook (the “Lost Filesâ€�)?
    Initially, the book was supposed to contain more chapters, but because most of our contributors delivered (much) more content than the book could accommodate, we couldn’t include it all in the book. (We could have added more pages, but then shipping costs would have increased significantly.) Therefore, we released four chapters as a free bonus eBook called “The Lost Files.� The 140-page eBook is available in PDF, ePUB and Mobipocket formats. Every registered customer is welcome to download the book, even if they haven’t bought The Smashing Book 2.
  • Will the book be available in other languages?
    Not yet.

Payment, Costs, Shipping

  • Can I get a bulk discount?
    Yes, of course! Please contact us at sales@smashing-media.com. We will be glad to answer all of your questions!
  • What are the shipping costs for my country?
    The shipping cost per book is €3,50 (for Europe) and $3.50 (for the rest of the world). We’re paying part of the shipping cost ourselves to make it possible for anyone to purchase the book, wherever they are in the world. We don’t have any hidden costs and haven’t made any tricky calculations.
  • What are the delivery times for my country?
    All books will be shipped via air mail to keep the delivery times as short as possible. You can find the anticipated delivery time for your country in the delivery times overview.
  • What payment methods are accepted?
    We primarily support PayPal, VISA, MasterCard and American Express. In Germany, Lastschriftverfahren and EC-cards are supported, too. We use a secure connection, with 256-bit AES encryption and a GeoTrust Extended Validation SSL CA certificate.
  • Is there a money-back guarantee?
    Yes, absolutely! There is no risk involved. Our 100-day full money-back guarantee keeps you safe. Don’t hesitate to return your purchase. You’ll get your money back—no ifs, ands or buts about it.
  • I’m experiencing problems with the check-out?
    You can either check our Smashing Shop FAQ page or contact our live support team by clicking the “Chat� button in the upper right of any Smashing Shop page.
  • I have a problem not discussed here.
    Please leave a comment below, or contact our live support team by clicking on the “Chat� button in the upper right of any Smashing Shop page. We would love to help you any way we can!

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Download the Free Media Kit, and Please Spread The Word

We’ve tried our best to make the book affordable and useful to every Web designer and developer worldwide. Please spread the word about The Smashing Book 2 in your blog posts and tweets. We really appreciate your support.

If you are planning to write an article about or to review The Smashing Book 2, please feel free to use the free Smashing Book 2 Media Kit (ZIP, 7 MB). The kit contains images, illustrations and photos that you might find useful for your article. Also, please don’t forget to tweet the link to the review with the hashtag #smbook2 so that we can track it and add it to our list of reviews. Your help is sincerely appreciated. Thank you for your time and help, guys!

Photos of The Smashing Book 2

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