stitch 12:25 PM 08-28-2009
I’d like to ask you all for some input and help concerning my web site.
I built this site back in the late 90’s And it’s time for a major upgrade.
My computer is old and my monitor is small and the site is laid out relative to the old 800 x 600 format ( That’s the resolution I use ) but when I look at the site in higher resolutions it just doesn’t look right.
So please help an old cowpoke out here and give me some input as to what you think I should do here, What resolution I should gear it for and so on.
I have a ton of work to do, and a lot of stuff to add to the site and I’d really appreciate everyone’s input.
Thank you much everyone !
My Web Site :
http://www.mountainhomeleather.com
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kydsid 12:45 PM 08-28-2009
1024x768 is more or less the industry standard for website size, AFAIK. Might be some designers around to say otherwise.
:-)
But if'in you send me your computer model info I can find out if you can support a higher resolution and therefore a bigger monitor so that you can work on the new site.
:-)
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ahc4353 12:49 PM 08-28-2009
I really can't see that much wrong with it. You have some text that needs a little attention and I would make it fit better on a larger screen but that's about it.
It's simple and easy to navigate and to me that's KEY.
I really look forward to the day when you can make me a holster for my 1911. Beautiful work!
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csbrewfisher 12:58 PM 08-28-2009
The only comment I have is that the site WORKS! That's better than about half of them out there.
I also think you're a damn good craftsman!
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stitch 01:06 PM 08-28-2009
Thanks ya' all ... Now for you big screen users, Is it normal when using a higher resolution for the site's to seem like they are squished to one side?
I know my system can support a bigger better monitor ... But with Wifey's job ending in two weeks that just aint gonna happen.
I Appreciate everyone's help and input here !
:-)
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Kreth 01:10 PM 08-28-2009
Originally Posted by ahc4353:
It's simple and easy to navigate and to me that's KEY.
:-) You could do some tweaking with the text and colors, but why mess with a clean, easy-to-navigate layout? I think too many sites now are crammed with widgets and cascading menus and pop-ups that just clutter up the screen.
Posted via Mobile Device
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The site looks pretty good to me, easy to navigate. I hope to buy a holster for my Glock from you someday.
:-)
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Footbag 01:41 PM 08-28-2009
It looks nice to me, but having designed a few websites I will make a few suggestions. I'd love to see a nice closeup of either the tooling or the stitching in the header of the website. Perhaps even overlay your logo on top of it. You would need to take a bunch of photo's and do some photo-shopping, but it could look great. Or if you could tool your logo into a piece of leather, and just take a detail picture of that and use it as a header.
Personally, I'm not a big fan of textured backgrounds. I'd prefer the contrast of your product off a solid background. That said, it's all personal preference. So ignore my advice if it's more effort then it's worth. If you're designing in HTML, consider testing the waters with a wordpress blog. Very easy to design and set up E-commerce, and they don't all look like blogs.
This is my business blog...
http://www.pennfurnitureonline.com/Blog/ It is a events and news blog, so it is cluttered by nature. You wouldn't have to add so much content.
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ahc4353 01:44 PM 08-28-2009
Originally Posted by Footbag:
It looks nice to me, but having designed a few websites I will make a few suggestions. I'd love to see a nice closeup of either the tooling or the stitching in the header of the website. Perhaps even overlay your logo on top of it. You would need to take a bunch of photo's and do some photo-shopping, but it could look great. Or if you could tool your logo into a piece of leather, and just take a detail picture of that and use it as a header.
Personally, I'm not a big fan of textured backgrounds. I'd prefer the contrast of your product off a solid background. That said, it's all personal preference. So ignore my advice if it's more effort then it's worth. If you're designing in HTML, consider testing the waters with a wordpress blog. Very easy to design and set up E-commerce, and they don't all look like blogs.
This is my business blog... http://www.pennfurnitureonline.com/Blog/ It is a events and news blog, so it is cluttered by nature. You wouldn't have to add so much content.
I agree. I'm not a fan of crazy fonts as well (not that you have any). My point is that all the focus should be on your work.
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kydsid 01:46 PM 08-28-2009
Originally Posted by stitch:
Thanks ya' all ... Now for you big screen users, Is it normal when using a higher resolution for the site's to seem like they are squished to one side?
I know my system can support a bigger better monitor ... But with Wifey's job ending in two weeks that just aint gonna happen.
I Appreciate everyone's help and input here ! :-)
Stitch I have a 30" at home. Everything is on one side!
:-) But yes you get used to websites being centered left once you go beyound a 1200x1080 resolution.
As for the monitor. How big is yours? I have a couple just laying around the house and while shipping costs a lot for even and LCD once you package it right my family lives in Tucson and if you would be willing to meet at least in Phoenix area I'll just give you one.
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stitch 01:59 PM 08-28-2009
Good input here! ... I knew I could count on you guy's
:-)
I'm going to do just a teeny bit of tweaking then ask your input again.
Jason, My monitor is a 16" ... yeah I know, I know ...
There is no way I'd just let you "Give" me a monitor, I'd be willing to drive to Tucson and buy one from you ...And smoke some stogies with you
:-)
My Schedule is pretty screwed up for the next couple of weeks with my gun show I put on comming up .... But we'll talk ... We might be able to work out something.
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Rabidsquirrel 02:11 PM 08-28-2009
If you're going with a rebuild, go with something that scales to different sizes/resolutions. It's easier than it sounds. I'm a fan of a centered layout. I like how your site now is easy to navigate. Nothing is more frustrating that trying to navigate a horribly layed (lain??) out website. I like solid colors instead of a patterned background. Tables and CSS are easy to work with. PHP makes making updates easier. I would add an option to view more pictures, close ups, backs, etc.
Again, as others have said, simple/easy is best. I don't want to have to go to 16 different pages to have to order. Try not to completely change the structure to avoid confusing returning customers.
-edit-
Oh yeah, when testing, don't just use IE. Use Firefox, Opera, Safari, Chrome. Change your resolution and see how it looks too. The days of "This site is designed for IE and 800x600 resolution" are over (not that I saw it on your page).
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kelmac07 02:15 PM 08-28-2009
Stitch...looks good to me. Simple and easy to use, nice pictures, and it WORKS!! I am of the old school "keep it simple stupid".
:-) :-)
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stitch 02:22 PM 08-28-2009
How in the heck do you make it scale to different resolutions?
I'm not doing a major rebuild ... The site has worked well for me since 98'
Just trying to tweak it a little so it looks good.
Good input here ... Some stuff I never thought about
:-)
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Rabidsquirrel 02:31 PM 08-28-2009
I'm not a hard ore programmer, so there's probably an easier way, but I always set widths in CSS with a percentage, so it doesn't really matter what resolution you use, it adapts to the situation. It would require a start from scratch though.
I'd just leave your site the way it is. Maybe experiment with a few backgrounds or something.
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JE3146 01:33 PM 08-29-2009
I've done a number of sites... The only thing I would suggest would just to redo the table settings to percentages instead of fixed dimensions, then to redo the buttons with something called a CSS sprite. Something graphically appealing and professional. Those 2 things would add a lot of life to a very simple and easy to use site. Redoing the tables with CSS div containers would be optimal, but highly unnecessary.
It's not a bad site, but the oldschool buttons detract, and adding multidimensional support would be a welcomed thing.
That and make the subpages follow a consistent pattern. A navigation bar must be a consistent thing. Hitting 'back' is a thing of the past.
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