04/08/2008

7 Advanced CSS Menus

Check out this great CSS advanced menu tutorial by Nick La, showing us how to slice up the menu design step by step and putting them together with CSS.
Note: there is an IE6 bug where the hover effect doesn’t display properly. To fix that, you can use Javascript to specify the to display block on mouseover.

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A new concept by altering the non navigation items on hover state which will focus the user’s attention on the item they have hovered on, and create a new look and feel for the site overall. Works perfectly in any modern browser, yet still be fully functional in your older version of IE as well.
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The Famous Suckerfish Dropdowns is now back and they’re more accessible, even lighter in weight (just 12 lines of JavaScript), have greater compatibility (they now work in Opera and Safari without a hack in sight) and can have multiple-levels.
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This menu has a vertical sliding first sub level then two flyout levels and demonstrates how it is possible to change positional styling from ‘absolute’ and off screen to ’static’ and expanding the menu vertically.
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A useful CSS technique for providing pop-up descriptive content by extending nav menus with tool-tips, alerts, notifications, or additional info.
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8 Great CSS based Menus, you just can’t miss.
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Drop Down Tabs comes with 5 sleek examples to let you quickly pick your favourite to use on your site. Customize each example’s CSS to modify the look as desired. We got you covered alright!
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16:25 Posted in CSS , How-to , Inspiration , Web , Web design | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: css, web, design

Most Artistic Photo Studio Design Ever

I said “Wow!” when saw this flash template. It was recently released by FlashMint. Though I do not really back up tendency to use website templates instead of custom design, but this photo studio flash CMS template pleasantly surprised me. It costs only $109 but looks like $1000s. Why? Bright colors, graphic motion, clean images – all it make the design look trendy and artistic. The navigation is precise and sharp. Have just noticed – you can drag the images up and down with a mouse. Good job, FlashMint team!

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Photo studio flash template - Live Demo

3 Steps To Creating A Freelancing Brand That Sells

Dependable. Innovative. Trustworthy. Creative … any one of these words (and many others) could describe your personality as a freelancer. But are you making sure that potential clients know exactly why you stand out from the competition?

If you’re not wrapping your personal brand around everything you present to the world online, you’re going to lose customers to those who are. Here are three simple steps that can help you strengthen your brand in the next seven days.
Step One: Define What It Is You Want To Be Known For

When you’re running your own show, the temptation is there to want to be all things to all people (because you want a a crazy big pile of customers). But a Jack (or Jill) of all trades is one confusing thing to customers. While you may offer multiple services, what you’re really after is being known as “The ______ expert.” In other words, whatever your ____ is, you want people to have conversations that end like this, “Oh, you need ____? Email (you), s/he’s the ____ master.”

Since the drop-dead easiest way to get extra business without extra work is by word of mouth, it’s up to you to give all of those mouths the word(s) they need to say.

So give it up: What’s your ______?

Step Two: Define Why You Rock At ______

First impressions are driven by immediate experiences. People have been trained further by media to respond to sound bites and short, catchy slogans that lock in an experience. You have to accommodate that by creating an experience around your _____. Maybe it’s years of experience. Maybe it’s dependability. Maybe it’s luxury, or quality, or youth, or speed, or service … it could be anything, but you’ve got to be able to communicate it in a way that resonates with what your target customers want.

* Are you the writing expert who delivers quality rather than the disposable content of competitors?
* Are you the SEO expert who stays ahead of the competition through creative strategies?
* Are you the marketing expert who delivers big to the small players of the world?

Strong brands can be described in just a handful of words. An emotion. An experience. What’s yours?

Answer me: You’re the ______ who (rocks because …)?

Step Three: Communicate This Every-which-where

Now you’ve got your boiled-down, highly distilled 180-proof branding message. Now you have to make sure you’re telling people about it. Is it the first impression on your website? Do you communicate it in your emails? Do you encourage your customers to share it? Everywhere you turn, you want both potential and current clients to be immersed in the experience they’ll get when they hand over their cash to you.

And that’ll leave you saying, “Holy _____, my phone’s ringing off the hook!” And that’s some good stuff.
Bonus Step Four: Now ‘Fess Up: What’s Your _______?

15:55 Posted in How-to , Web | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: web, freelance, job, work