On 19 Mar 2004, at 09:52, Mark Stanton wrote:
Tip #1 - make sure the psd files come from a designer that understands
CSS.
Good luck, there aren't many of them ;-)
Ian Lloyd
~
WEB: http://www.ian-lloyd.com/ | AIM: uklloydi
Round-the-World trip blog:
On 19 Mar 2004, at 10:18, Mike Brown wrote:
Off the top of my head, some things you may need to sort out with the
designer:
:: is it a fluid or fixed-width layout?
:: do you use fonts or images for navigation?
:: do elements on the page have to be exactly the pixels apart shown
in the design, or
You'd be fine doing the templates from supplied photoshop files?
I guess this would mean replicating the look of a PSD file
with css code? Would this kind of client expect standards
compliant css or rigid WYSIWYG works in IE code, any tips
to ensure that the result will be decent css
I have always written standards compliant css for a site around a
clients recommendations as to colours and position of logos etc. Now
I've been asked:
You'd be fine doing the templates from supplied photoshop files?
I guess this would mean replicating the look of a PSD file with css
code?
Neerav I have always written standards compliant css for a site around a
Neerav clients recommendations as to colours and position of logos etc. Now
Neerav I've been asked:
Neerav You'd be fine doing the templates from supplied photoshop files?
Neerav I guess this would mean replicating the
I've actually nearly always designed new sites or templates from my graphics file -
whether that's fireworks or photopaint. To me, there's no difference in the two
methods but designing your layout visually in the first instance gives you the best
idea as to how the finished product will more
Thanks to mark, Sarah, Mike and Wendy for their tips :-) Knowing what
the other side is probably expecting when developing helped a lot.
--
Neerav Bhatt
http://www.bhatt.id.au
*
The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
See