Tinkering with interface styling techniques
I've been fiddling here with different styling techniques on forms. If you've seen my presentation materials, you can see I've been stuck in a gradient and Verdana rut. I also wanted to try out some variations on the generally-accepted rounded corner techniques -- trying out some ideas with borders and shading.
Here's the test form I was using to audition some different ideas. Click the image for a full-size version...
http://www.lotus911.com/nathan/escape.nsf/images/NTFN-6YNQW2/$File/ExampleFullSize.png" target="_new">
I'm not going to detail right here how I did everything you see. Give it a shot to see if you can do it yourself. And if you CAN'T, then let me know, and I'll detail the technique I used.
UPDATE: Click read more... I kept tinkering it and it got very, very slick.
Props to my colleague Bill Wheaton for asking me to do the impossible.
http://www.lotus911.com/nathan/escape.nsf/images/NTFN-6YNTWW/$File/ExampleBoxField.png" target="_new">
"AEROSTYLE" is text.
Actually, it's better than that. It's text in a table cell in the form. I can literally put anything in there that can appear on a form.
Yes, the design is still fluid. This is a z-layer. It's right aligned with a buffer.
It's a lot of work for an interface technique, but (and please forgive the immodesty) that is just DEAD SEXY.




Comments
I know how I'd do it conceptually, but I haven't built it. Does that count?
Posted by Charles Robinson At 03:00:36 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
For instance, there's an interesting indentation technique on the "THIS STUFF" section. There's a couple of ways that this might be feasible, but the approach I used is actually pixel-wise.
I suppose I should point out that this form is fully fluid. The screenshot is about 700px wide, but I've blown it out to 1400 and it fills the screen nicely. I took a shot of it here { Link }
Obviously a good deal of it is also in my presentation. I just find myself relying more and more on border controls to tweak to perfection, and I want to see if people notice and/or like the technique.
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 03:52:32 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 04:03:37 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
That being said, a cooler technique for that text overlay (and it would be nice to see the source image you used for that) would be as a section header that identifies the bordered content. That's a very web 2.0 styling technique, and I've been meaning to get around to trying it.
However, my anal retentive nature keeps kicking in, and I can't bring myself to do it by actually embedding the text into the graphic. I really want to figure out a way to do an overlay on a Z-axis with a layer, but I haven't been able to coax that into working just yet. :) But then you could actually put, say, a combobox over the border's edge. That makes for some pretty interesting bounded progressive disclosure techniques.
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 04:18:43 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
{ Link }
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 04:26:49 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
A lot of the stuff you're showing is cool, but can you give any use cases that would employ it? It's some interesting proof of concept work, and it is amazing that you can do some of this in the Notes client. I'm just not sure of the usefulness. Oh, and I'm a little concerned by the amount of work required and the maintenance burden it imposes. I don't get to bill for my time.
Posted by Charles Robinson At 05:30:55 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Tim Tripcony At 06:26:07 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 06:30:37 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 06:39:10 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
I think you can do better. I love your work dearly but I do still think your are in a UI rut. /bruce grabs a drumstick
Personally I find small little groups of fields hard on the eye (yes one eye). What I would like to hear from you is a list of some non-Notes applications and websites that you use frequently and which ones you like the UI of.
Posted by Bruce Elgort At 09:28:10 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Rob McDonagh At 09:29:11 PM On 02/22/2007 | - Website - |
@9 - I'll withhold any further comments until I see what you've come up with.
Posted by Charles Robinson At 12:24:16 AM On 02/23/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Alan Bell At 04:05:40 AM On 02/23/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Alan Bell At 06:14:36 AM On 02/23/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Brian Miller At 10:15:43 AM On 02/23/2007 | - Website - |
We've used images fo rounded corners which gets tough with gradiants. Do you have a simpler way.
Posted by Daniel Schiavone At 10:50:20 AM On 02/23/2007 | - Website - |
This is great stuff. I was able to duplicate much of it thanks to your other post on progressive disclosure, but am just stuck on a couple other things you did here.
Is there a chance you could make a simple download available, containing only this form, so we could see exactly how you achieved some of these effects? If not, thanks for the inspiration!
Posted by Bill Kron At 04:52:33 PM On 09/04/2008 | - Website - |