Selco Community CU unveils GWU

By Doug Williams on December 09, 2007

12 Comments

Selco Community Credit Union, in Eugene, Oregon, launched the second GiveWith.Us site developed by Trabian.

Although it‚Äôs technically the second launch, Selco has actually been playing with us in the GiveWith.Us sand box for over a year now. Selco was a part of the Filene i3 team that worked with us to develop My Community Connection, the precursor to GiveWith.Us – the veritable IIe to the Macintosh.

Selco has been using MCC with success for a year and will also be working with us as we develop the front-page widget to compliment and cross-promote the site. So, to say Selco is launching GiveWith.Us is a bit of a misnomer. They’ve helped us upgrade the Firebird to KITT.

All that, and they are lucky enough to call the best college town ever home (sorry, it’s my list, and Madison, Boulder, Athens, Austin, Bloomington and the rest are all vying for second place).

Apply Liberally

By Charlie Trotter on October 31, 2007

15 Comments

Introducing Make My Logo Bigger Cream.

Make My Logo Bigger Cream

If you design, watch this video. If you buy design, watch it twice.

An actionable note on awesome videos

If you make an awesome video that you’d like to have passed around and blogged (Make it relevant. No Viral for Viral’s sake.), offer an embed option so people can watch it right in the blog post where they may well have heard about it first. Run your URL modestly at the end of the spot to tie it back to you if you’d like, but if the rest of your site offers other content, it will most likely get linked back to anyway.

In this case, had an embed option been available, I still would have linked it and directed you to visit the actual site to see it in context.

However, embed tags or not, this video is truth. So, watch it, or watch it twice according to the prescription above.

Limits are possibilities

By Brent Dixon on September 19, 2007

17 Comments

At BarCampBank I confessed that blogging stresses me out a little bit. There’s always so much going on, so much to say, so many ideas that it can be overwhelming to sit down and tackle any one of them with clarity.

I was feeling this yesterday – I knew I wanted to write a post, but wading through the potential topics was, as they say, like drinking from a fire hose. So I gave up, grabbing a book to distract myself. I’m reading Chip Kidd’s novel “The Cheese Monkeys.” Here’s what I read:

“Always remember: Limits are possibilities. That sounds like Orwell, I know. It’s not – it’s Patton. Formal restrictions, contrary to what you might think, free you up by allowing you to concentrate on purer ideas.

As graphic designers you want the world as your palette. But beware: You can be crippled by too many choices, especially if you don’t know what your goals are.”

One of the most difficult but important challenges in creative work – whether it’s writing, design, media strategy, product innovation, or gardening – is narrowing the focus and creating self-imposed limitations.

In visual design, using a pen and paper before you even think about touching a computer is key. Photoshop has so many bells and whistles, it’s easy to get caught up in the ancillary aesthetics before working out the concept. Make sure your house has a foundation before you hang up curtains.

In our web design process, we limit ourselves and the client by starting each design with a site wireframe (for example: Filene’s initial wireframe). It is unimpressive to look at (a common client reaction is “What’s with all the grey boxes?”), but crucial because it is the underpinning of the entire design. This step forces everyone involved to focus on information architecture and usability before we worry about the pretties.

By the same token…

Social marketers: Think focused, initiated communities over huge vanilla communities.

Podcasters: Develop each episode around a predefined template (ex: intro, topic, break with contact info, topic, exit) to help keep it organized and easy to produce.

Web application designers: Build less. Limit features to only what is necessary.

Gardeners: I dunno. Good luck.

"Where's the 'Wow Factor?'"

By Brent Dixon on July 27, 2007

22 Comments

This question recently came up in a conversation about a credit union website. So my simple question, in reply, is this:

What if instead of looking for zany animations, a website that plays rock music, or any other of the latest hippest coolest fads…what if the “wow factor” was that your credit union’s site was accessible and easy to use?

If you’re designing a site, or managing the process, ask yourself why your users are coming to your site. Make that experience as close to perfection as possible. Businesses who pay a mind to solid user-experience – scannable content, attractive design that looks consistent across browsers, simple navigation, copywriting that sounds like a human – these are the Wow Factor.

And here’s another question that tends to come up in tandem with the former: “What do young people want in a web site?” As a young person, I can say this: We are impatient. We want what we want, and we want it now. We do not want to have to wade through all the fluff that you think is “neat” to get to the bottomline.

I hereby rename the traditional “Wow Factor” the “Neat Factor.” Because that’s what happens, users will say “oh that’s neat,” and then go back to wanting your site to just work right, please.

It's a Picnik!

By Charlie Trotter on March 06, 2007

13 Comments

Well, Brent and I have been trying to find time to write a little post-love for Picnik. So, in a busy moving week, we are brute-forcing it.

Picnik is a new, free, Flash-based web app for editing and sharing your photos. It lets you have the simpler features of Photoshop and/or Photoshop Elements, what you might use for a quick crop or color adjust, without having to open that pig of an app. Don’t get me wrong, I use PS to make a living, but it’s a pig and I only open it when I have to. Thanks to Picnik, for little things, I don’t have to. Blamn.

The editing options available are: Auto-fix, Rotate, Crop, Resize, Exposure, Colors, Sharpen and Red-eye. And under a tab called Creative Tools there are a few fun Special Effects available: B&W, Sepia, Boost, Matte, Vignette and Soften. Now, they don’t offer layers, or paint brushes, or vector masks, but most people who buy Photoshop Elements just want to kill some red-eye, crop a bad framing or correct the colors and contrast. Picnik delivers with ease. Besides, there are only about 10% of Photoshop’s stock filters that can be used tastefully anyway. Most folks don’t need them and most family photo-albums will fare better without their creators being made dangerous with too-cheesy filters. ::coughs “Watercolor” into fist::

Now for the sharing.

Picnik is gorgeously, seamlessly integrated with Flickr. Take these few steps with me.

*Take a photo and download it to your computer *Login to Picnik and grab the photo from your computer *Edit it *Upload it to Flickr from within Picnik with all the usual Flickr options like adding it to a photo set, tagging, title, description *Done

Additionally, you can use Picnik to edit a photo you have already uploaded to Flickr and either create an edited duplicate or replace the old photo. You can also email the edited photos from Picnik to a host of popular photo sharing and printing sites like Wal-Mart, PhotoBucket, Kodak EasyShare to name a few.

Picnik can also access your web cam (if you give it permission) and you can take a shot of yourself, edit it and upload it to Flickr. All right in your browser.

OK, the cover my Trapper Keeper is covered with “Charlie Hearts Picnik 4EVR.” It’s time to show you its handy-work. Here are three shots I edited in Picnik:

Webcam Photo by Picnik

Love Picnik

It's a real Picnik.

Please do enjoy. We are. Please also feel free to download the photos of me to decorate to your office, home, gym locker, that visor thing in your car. At least I’m wearing a shirt.

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