Min’ blog, an online journal of a Vietnamese desinger

The process of building my blog - part 1: Design

Posted by Min Tran on 21 Apr 2008. 23 comments

“Do you have a blog?”

Yes, here you are!

But I was obsessed with this question for a while. I got it started in early 2007, around 5-6 different concepts were made, with over 20 variations, and this project seemed never-ending. “Working on our own project” - it sounds pleasant and self-decisive for a designer, right? But it’s a nightmare, when it ends up in a situation wherein it’s me to be my own client, my most finicky client, my worse client. Until last week, I eventually found myself some free time and felt that there’s no excuse to delay this project. “The show must go on!”. I made my mind to bring my blog to life, this time!

Hold on for a second! I know it’d be too lengthy to show you how my blog is done, or call a design process. I’m, however, being extremely excited with its launch, and it makes me feel eager to take you in there behind the curtain, to see what I’ve done. 

Inspiration

I opened a blank Photoshop canvas and asked myself “How’s the design gonna be?”, and I got stuck there, couldn’t find the answer. In fact, I didn’t have any demands or ideas about what form my blog would take. All I wanted was to make it look nice, in any style that would work and reflect my personality. And for my creative thinking, I just let it flee and flow.  The design would be taken shape in such a way that the site should be designed.

Keeping creativity flowing is what any designer gets hitched. People often say: “Being creative!”. That sounds simple, but it’s rather hard to do, huh? Your creativity conceals somewhere around here but how to get it aroused? I created an “inspirational board” and added whatever I was happening to think of : websites, photos, old books, and sundries.  I even set it as my desktop wallpaper. Everytime I looked at it, it could brainwave a little bit on how my work would be going on .

image

First try-out

First concept began taken shape at random while I was browsing a Flickr site, which might be a good source of inspiration for me.  I saw there several interesting photos of a small room with a windowpane and a wall which some stuffs were hung upon. These photos reminded me of the place I lived when I was 7 or 8.

image Draft 1

I showed this off and asked these same questions: “Do you like this?” or “How does this compare to that?”, and I received many positive feedbacks. Most everyone seemed to feel pleased with it, except me! While the color tone worked quite good, the design wasn’t well laid-out. The more content I added, the more clustered the layout was. It’s hard for me to reject what’s close to my heart. But you gotta go, babe!

In a regretful state of mind, I started on making another fresh - a totally new concept.

Design is problem solving

The best way to envision this new concept is putting everything in a wireframe.  By doing that, I could control every element and develop my ideas based on design features and content.  In Illustrator, I drew some quick grid-based wireframes with a few gray boxes and place-holding elements.

imageWireframes

The first wireframe seemed OK but since I had yet to have much content, the second would work fine at that time. This wireframe was a good launch for me to create my second mockup.

draft 2Draft 2

“Well done!”, my friends uttered. And I pretty liked it, too. Anyway, the grunge/collage style happened to be over-used. I wanted mine to be more unique and friendly. Looking back at it, those grunge elements stressed out the layout so much that my readers could be sidetracked from the content, meanwhile my goal was to create a design whose any element could embrace the content. After a couple of days, I felt this kind of design wasn’t what I was looking for. And baby, you got rejected!

Yet, why not try some new color combinations for the next comps? I came up with this idea, and here’s another design with more elegant and warm feelings.

imageDraft 3

That looked better overall. It’s about 50% for me to like it. Looking again and again at it for a few times, I realized the navigation wasn’t eye-catching enough to take a heed. The style and color scheme were dissolving in what I needed. Again, one more design had to be rejected.

Anyhow this time with this design, I could make an orientated improvement for the next comps. I knew that the final result was just around here.

imageDraft 4

This blueprint obviously was one step forward from the previous one. The navigation was enhanced to give a noticeable look. But still, the top bar caused the layout look clustered, and the elements on the mashead weren’t well matched. I came back to the mocking board and created an extra mockup. The layout this time was polished with some elegant 17th-century elements, the refined typography and the improved color - all bringing about a warm mood to the website.

Done, at last!

imageFinal design

At the moment I was nearly stressed out to my very last nerve, whilst some other projects been waiting in line to deal with, this revision came up like a miracle. And this is, as you see, the final blueprint. It looks like all tosses and turns have been solved after all. What a great pleasure after it took a long way to go, in middle of the road, to the one that is truly mine!

Navigation treatments

The most interesting part of working on personal projects is putting new styles into test and trying to apply new ideas that we usually don’t take a challenge to deal with clients’ projects. The navigation of my blog looks very simple with just 3 or 4 items, but it plays a very important part in the entire design. It took a lot of time to turn around with it. The more attention I paid, the better the navigation looked.

image

The first one is fairly unappealing because it seems not to beg viewers to click on. The solution to this is adding some design elements and improving its typography to make it more prominent. The second and the third look much better in term of design, but I want them more distinctive and outstanding, and stay in a consistent way.

I personally, instead of creating extra alternatives, then choosing one that suits me, I still try with an old one by asking for opinions, doing some researches, and improving its weakness until a desired result is gained. The final treatment (the fourth) is a huge improvement from the third. The general style stays the same, but the way it acts is very different.

Design a sexy comment form

I love getting comments. For this wishful thinking, my comment form should make my readers feel like leaving a word. So I did it with a very general form.

image

It looks nice and it works. There’s nothing wrong with this form, but it’s not what I was thinking it had to be. I tried with a part of the scroll taken from the navigation, putting it into the form to see how it’d be, and I didn’t have to go further. Design sometimes is very simple, right?

image

The form now looks stronger. Everything aligns well. Inputs display very clearly. All are consistent.

Conclusion

“We enjoy the process far more than the proceeds”

Warren Buffett once said. As working on your own projects, everything naturally becomes more interesting. It may be a headache for me because I myself have to treat and judge my work on grounds of a client. Nevertheless, it’s always a great chance for me to let loose my creativity, try new techniques, apply new ideas and make beautiful mistakes.

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There have been 23 comments so far

Matias 17 May 2008

Thank you so much for posting about your design process.
I just came across your blog through stylegala (somebody posted about the Bright! iconset), and I’m very glad I did.

Min Tran 17 May 2008

@Matias: I’m glad that you enjoy my post. Thanks for your words.

PXLated 17 May 2008

Wonderful post. Some really nice work here.

Jacob 18 May 2008

Well! I was also planning a redesign of my portfolio.
So I must be in for lots of revisions of the first draft as well, right? But the final result is quite spectacular. I like the color combos and yes! There is a warm feeling. Good Work!

Debbie 18 May 2008

I can’t tell you how interesting this post was to me. I am right in the middle of this process and it is stressing me out. Am I my own worst critic? Yes. LOL. I have been struggling to get some kind of design for my site and have more than 20 versions. All of which I don’t like.

It was refreshing to see I’m not the only one that struggles as a designer with their own personal site. But I enjoyed reading your thought process and how you ended up with this beautiful final design. I really love the look of your site and you can tell you took some time with the details.

I too am planning on using Expression Engine for my site as well. I love seeing other EE sites and how they incorporate the design into the program. Great job here!

Min Tran 18 May 2008

@Jacob: I had around 4-5 variations of the first concept, which are too lengthy to post here. Good luck with the redesigning :)

@Debbie: Good luck with your design/redesign process.  It sounds painful, but working on your personal project always has a lot of fun. The more attention we pay, the better result we get.

I will be writing the EE integration process here really soon.

@all: Thank you for your kind words.

Toan Nguyen 19 May 2008

Thanks for sharing your design process with us.
It’s really a masterpiece

Antonio 19 May 2008

Nice articles and nice blog, love the process and thanks for sharing, is so positive for me to read about your process since Im aiming to start doing web-design, cheers and best wishes.

Min Tran 20 May 2008

Thanks for all your comments. I’m glad that you like this article!

Zoe 21 May 2008

I found this very interesting, I went through a similar process with my own blog (though I don’t think I will ever be finished). I’m no designer though, so mine isn’t too great!

A note though - your navigation is offset in ie 6 - which I am forced to use at work! Yuck.

Min Tran 21 May 2008

@Zoe: thanks for spotting that issue. I already fixed that. Thank you!

Emma 23 May 2008

Hi, Thanks for posting about yoru design process. I’m creating my own portfolio site at the moment. I have no trouble with other peoples but doing something personal is so much harder. I like the idea of a design board, I’m going to look for inspiration myself.

- great site, and lovely comment box.

Min Tran 23 May 2008

@Emma: Thanks for your kind words.
Good luck with the design.

Michael Chanter 27 May 2008

Love your website! Clean simple, nice texture and wonderful icon freebies. Thanks.

fedegrafo 28 May 2008

Very nice site and incredible contents!

Thanks for sharing!

durgas 29 May 2008

Dear Min,
cani have full profile in the page `about` about you..
hope it is not showing full text...just like to read more about you..your childhood, very interesting..’

best wishes,
durgas

MiJa 05 Jun 2008

Thank you so much for sharing your process!  I’m in the middle of designing my portfolio, and am always running into the same issues you had run into.  It’s nice to see how others work thru their hurdles!  Good Stuff!

Pontus Johansson 07 Jun 2008

Howdy Min!
Great article, and the final design i wonderful! I’m currently in the middle of this process, and this article was a really nice read! I will definitely subscribe to your feed. Thanks for a great blog, and have a nice day =)

Sampson Orson Jackson 10 Jun 2008

How did you do the graphics of draft1 and draft2. I am a web/software application developer but i do some graphics too.

I’ve been wanting to do stuffs like that could you give us a little tutorial on it.

especially the rough cover note books in draft2.

Please.

Tran Hoang Vu 14 Jun 2008

Bài viết của bạn rất hay và chi tiết,thanks bạn nhiều.Nhưng mình có 1 góp ý nho nhỏ là tại sao bạn không viết bài viết này bằng tiếng Việt nhỉ ? Bài viết này thật sự rất hữu ích,nhưng mình nghĩ nó sẽ thật sự hữu ích hơn nhiều nếu đây là 1 bài viết hoàn toàn bằng tiếng Việt,đa số web designer ở Việt Nam đều là không chuyên,mình nghĩ bạn là 1 trong số ít ngoài phần đa số đó,nếu bạn có tâm huyết muốn chia sẻ những kinh nghiệm mình có được thì tại sao lại không chia sẻ rộng rãi cho dân mình nhỉ ? Bài viết này rõ ràng giới hạn với đa số web designer ở Việt Nam,mong bạn sớm có 1 bài viết chất lượng như bài này và hoàn toàn là tiếng Việt.

Min Tran 14 Jun 2008

@Tran Hoang Vu: I think most of my readers are English readers, so I write in English. That doesn’t mean I don’t support Vietnamese readers. If you want to contribute, can you translate the article into Vietnamese? I would appreciate that. I do want to write this article in Vietnamese, but I don’t have plenty of free time in my hand.

fearlex 20 Jun 2008

Is the first time that i found about the process of shaping the idea of your work. I’ve being stuck for a while on the redesign of my blog, and this have help me see techniques, that can improve my ideas. Thank you so much.

black jack 21 Jun 2008

Thank you very much for sharing this with us, it will help me getting thru my way of desingning a new web site project.

Thank`s again.

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