Archive for the ‘Design’ Category

One of WSD’s own wins art award

Sunday, July 24th, 2011

WSD at an art festival? Yup!WebSight Design’s Creative Director, Stephanie Long, participated in the first annual Kayenta Street Painting Festival, where she was awarded honors for best representation of her sponsor, the Biggest Loser’s Fitness Ridge Resort, in Ivins, Utah. The drawing, shown here, was a pair of running shoes, set against the red-rock desert landscape that is home to Fitness Ridge. The drawing was 10′ wide by 8′ tall. Unlike many other street painting events, the drawings were not washed away at the end of the weekend, but rather were allowed to fade with time and the natural elements.

While representing clients well might be a stretch for many fine artists, it’s second nature for WebSight Design, where we’ve been communicating clients’ branding and sales messaging for more than 15 years.

This is Stephanie’s second street painting festival, having participated in the Italian Street Painting Festival in San Rafael, California — the nation’s second-largest street painting event — in 2006. Drawing on the asphalt with brightly colored pastels is quite a break from manipulating pixels, but is a great way to get creative juices flowing, explore different artistic perspectives, and polish design skills. Event-goers enjoy such festivals because they get to see artists at work, and ask questions during the process.

Interested to find out how we can visually represent your business? Contact us, and let’s talk.


All this and the occasional print job

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

Gene Kilgore's Ranch Vacations - front cover

While our specialty remains web development — SEO-enhanced, open source, PHP-based web development for businesses small and large — we occasionally get our hands dirty with print work. Usually this involves creating print collateral and branding material for our existing web site design clients; however, this spring marked the completion of a unique project for one of our long-term clients, international dude ranch expert Gene Kilgore.

The eighth edition of Gene Kilgore’s Ranch Vacations is a robust guide to dude, guest, resort, and working cattle ranches in the US, Canada, and even Central & South America. The guide is organized by state (and country), and contains everything you need to know about nearly 100 different ranches: what the food is like, what the accommodations are like, if kids’ programs are available, what the price range is, a description of activities, and more. In the center of the book is a thick section of full-color photographs highlighting the beauty and fun available at many of the ranches. The guide also contains helpful tips on what to pack, and how to “be a good dude.”

And it’s all designed to fit in the back pocket of your jeans!

The book is a fantastic portable, personalizable supplement to Gene Kilgore’s www.ranchweb.com, which is getting a makeover — the WebSight Design works! — as we speak.

Gene Kilgore’s Ranch Vacations was a wonderful opportunity to provide an extra-web service for a great client and top-notch person, and a chance to strengthen our relationship with RanchWeb.com. We look forward to more great projects with Gene in the future. And we’ll be sure to blog about the launch of the upcoming redesigned RanchWeb.com web site.

To purchase Ranch Vacations, click here. And as Gene Kilgore might say, “Happy trails!”

Gene Kilgore's Ranch Vacations - full-color spread Gene Kilgore's Ranch Vacations - inside

A Redesign for Tres Agaves Products

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Homepage Tres Agaves Products

WebSight Design has just completed a much-needed revamp for TresAgavesProducts.com.

Our client’s goal with the redesign was to emphasize and strengthen their brand. To accomplish this, each page was custom designed rather than created to be template-based.

Along with the design element, we focused on integrating social media onto the site to help Tres Agaves grow their brand. This strategy included:

  • An RSS feed that incorporates Twitter updates from all members of the Tres Agaves Products Team and the blog
  • A community section which has quizzes, party planning suggestions, and shows live Facebook and Twitter feeds
  • A regularly updated blog also with a custom designed skin

This multimedia rich site includes a video gallery that can link to any video with an embed code, a photo gallery, and printable recipe cards.

With a desire to fill a major gap in the premium tequila market, Eric Rubin, former Cabo Wabo President Barry Augus and Chris Alvarez founded Tres Agaves Products in 2008. The company is dedicated to designing a product line that delivers the best margaritas. Since launching, it has been honored with various awards from prestigious competitions and won in multiple blind taste tests.


Founded in 1995, WebSight Design offers business clients a range of web site design and development services, including web site programming, web site hosting, web site and search marketing, and colocation management.

WebSight Design in Guitar Heaven with Santana

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

In the fall of 2010, long time WSD client, Santana, released his new album Guitar Heaven: The Greatest Guitar Classics of All Time. Santana and co-producer, Clive Davis, invited some of the best singers in rock to provide vocals for the tracks.

To celebrate the release, we designed a multimedia rich four-page mini-site inspired by the artwork from the album. The pages are jQuery based giving the site a cool slide effect that eliminates page load time. To allow the client to manage videos, links, and content, we fully integrated the site with Santana.com’s existing database.

Visit the mini-site to preview songs, purchase music, and watch behind-the-scenes videos of the making of the new album.


Founded in 1995, WebSight Design offers business clients a range of web site design and development services, including web site programming, web site hosting, web site and search marketing, and colocation management.

Site Redesign for Pacific Union Realtor Marilyn Rich

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Last week, WebSight Design launched a redesigned website for top performing real estate agent, Marilyn Rich. Recognizing the importance of brand consistency, our designer created and delivered a product, FineLivingMarin.com, that has been updated to reflect the colors and styles of our client’s parent agency, Pacific Union.

As a successful real estate agent, Mrs. Rich has ranked number one out of all Pacific Union offices in Marin County for years.  Her upgraded site highlights her accomplishments and will help her to continue to grow her professional web presence. And with market condition updates, details about the towns in Marin County, and access to MLS, it is an excellent resource for prospective homebuyers.

WSD provided the client with search marketing services as well. Our SEO team developed a plan that would help Mrs. Rich appear higher in the search engine rankings, a necessity in a competitive field such as real estate.

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Founded in 1995, WebSight Design offers business clients a range of web site design and development services, including web site programming, web site hosting, web site marketing, and colocation management.

Three Tips To A Successful Web Site Design

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

The ever-handy Rule of Thirds

1. Remember the Rule of Thirds.

Ever wonder why TheGridSystem.org is a 12-grid layout? It’s no accident that 12 is a multiple of three.

For a couple of thousand years, the Rule of Thirds, or the Golden Ratio for you mathematically-inclined folks, has worked an aesthetic guideline which states that a given visual space (your web site layout) should be divided horizontally and vertically into thirds, and that important design elements should be placed along the dividing lines, or at their intersections. This, the rule says, provides the most visually appealing layout. Both left- and right-brained figures throughout history, from Euclid to Rothko, have utilized this rule to create ingenious observations and works of art.

The Rule of Thirds is often tagged as the lazy man’s way to lay things out, but that’s really because of its simplicity and universality. In short, the rule works.

Web layouts are a bit trickier since the monitor size and screen resolution on everyone’s individual computers is a variable that the designer cannot control; however, if you stick with non-fluid layouts to constrain the horizontal space of your design, or use percentages in your CSS (a bit trickier, especially if non-scalable images are involved), the Rule of Thirds can provide you with focal points and design layouts that web users find easy to visually digest. Another popular method of utilizing the Rule is to design an “impact area” (often dominated by a “hero graphic”) that is divided in thirds aesthetically and is designed to be the primary focal point for the page. As the user scrolls down, simple 1/3 ratio columns for the text or remaining content can be used. Columns work well in vertically variable workspaces.

2. KISS all those pretty fonts goodbye.

Remember that annoying acronym we all learned in school? Just in case you’ve been living on a deserted island for the last decade or so, KISS stands for “Keep It Simple, Stupid.” And that’s precisely the best way to use type fonts.

I’m not saying you can’t indulge in unique, hand-created typography, or that you can’t mix typefaces, ever. But it must be done with care and artistry. Adding in that really cool font you downloaded for free from the link your nephew in HTML class sent you may not be your best bet for communicating your client’s message.

In fact, communicating your client’s message is the goal of the web site you’re designing. If that message isn’t already contained in the design of the typeface you want to use, skip the typeface and go neutral. Something like Helvetica Bold works incredibly well to get messages across (which is why we’ve seen such a resurgence of it in the self-publishing & blogging trends). The type font does not interfere with the actual words. You have something like 1/gazillionth of a second to get your message across to the web user, so do it the fastest, clearest possible way. If that isn’t with a fancy font that says it all for you, then say it with words, and make the words concise and easy to absorb.

I like to use no more than three fonts (excluding any fancy or unduplicatable logo fonts) in my designs: one main graphic font, one secondary graphic font, and one web-safe HTML font. Save the pretty stuff for non-text graphics.

3. Don’t give up.

Sounds like touchy-feely pandering, right? Well, it’s true.

These days, Photoshop, CSS, and your own artistic talents can pretty much do anything with a layout. Anything you want. If you have an idea in your head that’s just not translating onto a sketch pad or a monitor, keep at it.

Sometimes we all get a little bit too reliant on filters and effects, and when the desired outcome isn’t met with a drop-shadow or a gradient, it’s tempting to settle for “good enough.” Don’t do it. Nobody ever won a design award by settling. No client was ever thrilled to pay for a design that was settled on. And no web user has ever been wowed by “good enough.” If that brush stroke isn’t working for you like it should, go old school: get out your ink, brushes, and watercolor paper and draw precisely the stroke you need. If that typeface just isn’t quite right, pull it into Illustrator and tweak the anchor points until it is. If you think the paper effect you’ve made isn’t convincing, grab a real piece of paper and tear the edges, fold the corners, crumple the middle until it is.

There are also plentiful tutorials and resources on the web for just about any specific effect you’re trying to achieve. Do a Google search and see what you come up with. At worst, you’ll slightly expand your knowledge. At best, you’ll learn skills and tricks that will make your web layouts really shine.

And if all else fails, get up, and take a walk around your neighborhood. Fresh air is a great re-motivator, and inspiration is all around us, all the time.

Stephanie Long is an artist and designer with over a decade of web-specific experience currently lending her talents as Creative Director at WebSight Design. She believes that listening to the client is the key to a successful project, and that listening to yourself is the key to a happy life. And she actually likes deadlines — go figure. Stephanie recently got a Twitter account and now feels much younger.

Like this post? You might like this one, too: Design Is Not A Pretty Picture