3 Recommended UX Books to Take Your Web Design to the Next Level
The average designer has a number of valuable skills such as knowledge of design principles, practical ability with Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, Sketch–and a certain amount of experience showcased by...
View ArticleImprove Your Website’s Discoverability with Semantic Markup
In this tutorial we’ll look at building meaning into your content with open graph, Twitter cards, and microdata. By doing so your content will be more attractive, more relevant, and more discoverable...
View ArticleLearn the Principles of Landing Page Design in Our New Course
As a web designer, I’m sure you’ve had to design a landing page at some point. If you haven’t, you will. So why not get a head start and learn the essentials of landing page design?What You'll LearnIn...
View ArticleBootstrap 3 Succinctly: Changed JavaScript Features
When it comes to JavaScript in BS3, not much has changed; the vast majority of the changes we've seen so far have revolved around the CSS and components sections. There’s a reason for this.Most of...
View ArticleHow to Use Myth: “CSS the Way it Was Imagined”
In this tutorial, I'm going to walk you through a tool named Myth. Myth is an alternative CSS preprocessor which, unlike Sass or LESS, doesn’t use proprietary syntax. Instead, Myth adopts “future” CSS...
View ArticleMeet Tuts+ Survey Prize Winner Tassia Pellegrini
Name: Tassia PellegriniLocation: Amsterdam, NetherlandsTopics of Interest: Graphic Design, UX Design, Front-End Development, UI, Information ArchitectureOccupation: Interface Designer, Booking.comWhen...
View ArticleThe Command Line for Web Design: Introduction
For a long while working with the command line was considered to be outside the realm of web designers. It was used pretty much exclusively for things like server admin and file management and all...
View ArticleThe Command Line for Web Design: Grasping The Basics
There are just a few things you’ll need in order to get ready for all the cool web design stuff you can do with the command line. Many generic introductions to the command line will focus on things...
View ArticleCodePen Challenge #1: Results!
Last week we asked you to take part in our first CodePen Challenge (oh, there will be more)–here’s what you all cooked up!The ChallengeYou were asked to style some section links, based on a recent...
View ArticleBootstrap 3 Succinctly: Customizing Bootstrap 3
And so finally we get to the last tutorial in the series, which will show you how to create custom color sets.If you recall back at the beginning, when we were going through the major changes, I...
View ArticleHow to Create a Web Navigation Model
A “navigation model” describes the paths to each user goal on a website. Usually your product will have more than one user, and each user may have multiple goals, so models like this can be pretty...
View ArticleRichard Pearson, Art Director: Creativity, Trust and Building a Shared Vision
Editors Note: In this series, Conversations with Creative Collaborators, we look at the place of photography and how it is used accross creative industries. In this instalment we meet Richard Pearson,...
View ArticleMeet Tuts+ Survey Prize Winner David Kehrer
Name: David KehrerLocation: Traverse City, Michigan, USATopics of Interest: Web Design, Design & Illustration and Code Occupation: Creative Director at digital marketing agency OneupwebIn...
View ArticleTimelineMax: An Introduction to Tweening
What You'll Be CreatingIn the olden days of animation tweening was a term used to describe a frame by frame sequence, or what’s sometimes referred to as “in-betweens.” It’s that place where a single...
View ArticleThe Command Line for Web Design: Taming 3rd Party Packages
We commonly use third party packages in web design projects. We load in third party CSS from projects like Bootstrap and Foundation, and scripts like jQuery and Modernizr. Increasingly, we also use...
View ArticleHow to Display Update Notifications in the Browser Tab
Websites and web apps with frequently updated content have to figure out a way to grab users’ attention to tell them of updates, particularly where users may have moved away from the tab where the...
View ArticleLearn on the Go, With the New Tuts+ Courses Android App
If you want the flexibility to learn new skills wherever you are, then take a look at our Tuts+ Courses Android app.The free app lets you log in to your Tuts+ account and access all your favourite...
View ArticleThe Command Line for Web Design: Powering Up Front End Code
As a web designer there are three languages you’re pretty much guaranteed to work with one way or another: CSS, HTML and JavaScript. In this tutorial you’re going to leverage the command line to make...
View ArticleNew Course: Working With Clients to Get Design Approval
Getting design approval for a website is a minefield of personal opinion, endless iterations, and frustrating debates. It can undermine profitability, damage client relationships, and demoralise you as...
View Article500 Video Courses on Tuts+
This week marks a huge milestone for Tuts+ learning as we celebrate the release of our 500th video course!From our humble beginnings way back in 2007 we’ve grown to incorporate 10 different creative...
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