Skip to main content

Portfolio Sites

http://www.markwheeler.net

I like the responsive layout this has with the different sized tiles. Also many of them are animated, which looks really nice on a large display. I'm not a fan of the hamburger menu, but it works well on mobile.


http://dlanham.com

This one is similar, but I really like the more vertical layout with wider images. The bright vibrant colors on the black background really pop and draws the focus from the limited navigation to the artwork.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Responsive Portfolio Sites

One portfolio I like is  Heather Shaw , especially the use of color and the big panel images. The site is responsive in that the columns reduce and images shrink, which is really all it needs as it doesn't have any sort of menu. The second is  LingK . This one also has large images with minimal text, but when it turns to mobile the top adds a hamburger menu with a cool animation. The dropdown menu it opens seems to be bugged, but I like it in concept.

Design is a Job Response

What I take away from this is that when you sell yourself as a designer, you're selling your process, not your product. Even if you have a dozen great websites in your portfolio, those could all be flukes. How do you guarantee to a potential client that their  site will be as good as the others? It's all about your process, and you need to stick to it. He gives examples of how they'll try to interfere, but staying true to your process is key to delivering what you promised. That said, I don't think I agree completely with his refusal to sketch before researching. Showing what you're capable of with limited resources is a common tool to gauge someone's skill, like a game jam or a writing prompt. While that  client was impressed with their answer, I imagine most would like to have a little test to vet potential designers and see how they handle the task (at least if said designers aren't Big Names already).