| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | New York | |
| age | 30 | |
| visits | member for | 11 months |
| seen | 10 hours ago | |
| stats | profile views | 94 |
I work for the New York State Department of Labor as a Graphic Designer/Typographer/Web Designer for the Web Team and collaborate with the UX Team. I know way..... to much about web colors and fonts!
By Night... I am a Photographer and Mine-craft enthusiast!
Got Questions? Ask & Follow Me!
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2d |
answered | Responsive Breakpoints? |
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May 16 |
comment |
Best Approach for Responsive Linked Images from Desktop to Mobile? Thank you RK for your help. I looked at many responsive websites over the weekend and I noticed your example matched with other websites. I definitely want to avoid images siting side by side as they could be chopped on on various screens. Stacking images is the best approach. |
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May 16 |
accepted | Best Approach for Responsive Linked Images from Desktop to Mobile? |
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May 13 |
comment |
Best Approach for Responsive Linked Images from Desktop to Mobile? @Shauna: I forgot to mention this is in regards to a homepage look/feel only. Co-workers have been in debate in if the homepage should be scroll-able or not. That's why I posted my question on stack exchange because I am not sure what the current convention is. |
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May 10 |
comment |
Best Approach for Responsive Linked Images from Desktop to Mobile? The customer had requested the use of images rather than icons. Icons would of been a nice solution and easier to translate from desktop to mobile. |
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May 10 |
comment |
Best Approach for Responsive Linked Images from Desktop to Mobile? The images are on a safety website and one image is for adult safety while the other image is for child safety. Within the images I tried scaling down the images on mobile and they are difficult to see. I thought about stacking the images vertically but a common complaint is users hate to scroll. |
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May 10 |
asked | Best Approach for Responsive Linked Images from Desktop to Mobile? |
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Apr 23 |
comment |
Is it a bad idea to use grey buttons? Good examples however the colors in your examples could be misleading.. The first example draws the eye to the dark/bold text. Your second example has blue for secondary but the blue's weight is alot heavier than the orange which makes the secondary appear to look more primary. The third makes the secondary buttons seem disabled however the eyes are targeted to the primary. |
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Apr 23 |
comment |
Is it a bad idea to use grey buttons? @meepsh I work with web colors on a daily basis and if I could recommend any type of improvement I would just tone down the grey on your secondary buttons to colors #CCC or #DFDFDF. That way your buttons won't have such a strong presence and feel more as a secondary action. Currently both buttons have similar weights in color. |
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Apr 23 |
revised |
Is it a bad idea to use grey buttons? added 112 characters in body |
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Apr 20 |
revised |
Is it a bad idea to use grey buttons? added 186 characters in body |
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Apr 20 |
comment |
Is it a bad idea to use grey buttons? @KoenLageveen: Yes my example is using a different color for the text. I'll update my answer to include what a disabled button should look like |
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Apr 19 |
comment |
Is it a bad idea to use grey buttons? disabled buttons also have more of a faded out look showing the user they are unable to click the button. |
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Apr 19 |
answered | Is it a bad idea to use grey buttons? |
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Apr 19 |
answered | Contact page. Which is the better wording? |
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Apr 19 |
comment |
Contact page. Which is the better wording? Is this website for a company? small firm? 1 person? |
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Apr 3 |
revised |
Multilevel navigation menus for mobile devices improved formatting |
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Apr 3 |
revised |
Favorites mechanism & common design pattern improved formatting |
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Apr 3 |
suggested | suggested edit on Multilevel navigation menus for mobile devices |
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Apr 3 |
suggested | suggested edit on Favorites mechanism & common design pattern |