Is your website a noxious visual miasma? A hideous concoction of strident hues? A vomitous amalgamation of eye-related wretchedness? Well, this post may be for you.
You know how when you walk into Baskin Robbins, you see all those ice cream colors? And there’s that smell in the air? That sweet waffle cone smell that makes you feel like your nostrils just got a cavity? That shouldn’t be your website.
And with that, I welcome you to Part 3 of our “10 Ways to Make Your Website Look Better” series.
Today, we’re going to talk about color.
An introduction, and why I’m even bothering
I think it’s safe to say that MOST of us don’t use hideous color …
How proper line height will improve the look and stickiness of your site
This is Part 2 of the 10 Ways to Make Your Website Look Better series.
If content, as they say, is king, then the readability of that content must be a close second. After all, it doesn’t matter how good your content is if it can’t or won’t be read.
So here you are. You’ve written the blog post to end all blog posts. Or the sales letter that will surely make you six-figures over night. You post it online, sit back to watch the readers flood in, and KAZAAM! Nothing. No sales, no reader comments, no bump in subscribers, nothing.
You look at your site to troubleshoot it. It looks good. The text size is big …
10 ways to make your website better, Part 1 – Effective eye trails
The episode in which the Charfish explains the simplicity of effective websites, pays homage to Google and then rips the pants off of Yahoo! in front of everyone.
Before we get rolling on this post, let’s define what an eye trail is. No, it’s not where you take your eyes out for a nature walk. Nor is an eye trail what Hansel and Gretel left in the woods to find their way back home from the witch’s house.
An eye trail is the path your eye takes as it’s lead from visual element to visual element.
Note the passive sense of that: your eye is being lead. It’s not necessarily what your eye is looking for.
Let’s look …
Having a nice looking ebook increases the chances of it being read by a factor of one gazillion.
Lately, I’ve been doing more ebook designing than any other type of work and it’s been a total blast.
But I’ve noticed a few questions keep coming up over and over in regards to technical terms, layout ideas, etc. I’m going to cover some of those basics in this post, both for general education purposes and also as an aide to potential clients as to what kinds of things are possible with their own books.
A couple of the things I’m going to cover are very basic common terms from the world of print. Well, basic to some people, but brand new to many others. …

