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Main Area and Open Discussion => General Software Discussion => Topic started by: kalos on February 13, 2012, 03:22 PM

Title: website design
Post by: kalos on February 13, 2012, 03:22 PM
hello!

I need to build a simple portal and I need a simple menu design, but unique

I dont want any of those paid templates that look awful, but at the same time I cant design a professional one from scratch

any advice?

thanks!
Title: Re: website design
Post by: rgdot on February 13, 2012, 04:27 PM
I think that if you can name a site that comes close to what you have in mind it will be much easier. Anything from "lightweight" CMS or portals to WordPress can do all sorts of things simple or complex.
Title: Re: website design
Post by: kalos on February 14, 2012, 12:46 PM
I like this very much http://www.bvckup.com/
Title: Re: website design
Post by: rgdot on February 14, 2012, 03:07 PM
Not very hard to emulate, anything from WordPress ('turning off' blogging if necessary) to more complex CMSes (CMS Made Simple just to name one) should work.
Title: Re: website design
Post by: tranglos on February 14, 2012, 04:24 PM
I like this very much http://www.bvckup.com/

Beautiful site! Love it, and I know what you mean.

If you're looking for a free solution, it may not be so easy, because the aesthetically best designs aren't. Then it depends on what you need more: the css and javascript to display the menu, or a professionally designed color scheme and graphics?

For the former, you could find a web page with a css menu that you like and just copy the menu code from source. If there are any license issues, they will usually be specified in the source code comments. You can almost certainly find free css / javascript menus on various scripting sites, too; they tend to be public domain (they are just simple algorithms, after all). Or use a free theme as an example (the Fusion theme (http://wordpress.org/extend/themes/fusion) for wordpress has a nicely done menu and is free).

For the latter (graphic design), there's no easy way. I couldn't design my way out of a bathtub, so I did eventually buy a commercial theme (ca $35, there are cheaper ones too). It's hopeless when you don't have the skill or the tools.

Then there are commercial apps that come with ready-made designs that you can use directly or tweak. These apps come prepackaged with moderately well-designed graphics, such as buttons, themes and color schemes that you can fiddle with. For example, you could try Easy Button & Menu Maker (http://www.blumentals.net/buttonmenumaker/samples.php). It sells for about 20 Euro, so not cheap for a one-time use, but it's something you could consider. Perhaps even a trial version would suffice.

(Then there are more expensive, advanced ones such as Xara or Artisteer. I don't think there are free alternatives that would also include ready-made designs.)

Title: Re: website design
Post by: tranglos on February 14, 2012, 04:31 PM
Btw, check out their new website (http://www.bvckup2.com/) for an upcoming version 2. Truly beautiful simplicity, even better than the original.


Title: Re: website design
Post by: rgdot on February 14, 2012, 04:33 PM
For CSS menus CSS Tab Designer http://www.highdots.com/products/css-tab-designer/ is free, somewhat limited but may be good enough
Title: Re: website design
Post by: 40hz on February 14, 2012, 06:33 PM
Btw, check out their new website (http://www.bvckup2.com/) for an upcoming version 2. Truly beautiful simplicity, even better than the original.




Oh that is clever! Both from a marketing theme and technical perspective.

Love it.  :Thmbsup:
Title: Re: website design
Post by: apankrat on February 15, 2012, 06:14 PM
Btw, check out their new website (http://www.bvckup2.com/) for an upcoming version 2. Truly beautiful simplicity, even better than the original.

Thanks!  :-)
Title: Re: website design
Post by: 40hz on February 15, 2012, 06:23 PM
@apankrat - more like let us thank you. That was one of the more original ultra-minimalist web designs I've seen in a long time. Even more impressive is how neatly it dovetailed with the product philosophy and the company you did it for.

I like it when accompany does 360-degree branding and identity. Bravo! :Thmbsup: