Web Design: The Most Important Usability Change You Haven’t Made Yet
By Daniel Miessler on September 17th, 2007: Tagged as Blogging | Design | Typography | Writing
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I have a new design philosophy. It’s called 100% Easy to Read. Here are the highlights:
- Don’t tell us to adjust the font size
- Don’t tell us busy pages look better
- Don’t tell us scrolling is bad
- Don’t tell us text isn’t important (95% of “web design” is typography)
- Don’t tell us to get glasses (use a font-size that’s large enough)
- Standard font size for long texts
- Active white space
- Reader-friendly line height
- Clear color contrast
- No text in images
I’ve been thinking a lot about the presentation of my text lately. Until now it’s been about the formatting of the text within the post itself, but now I’m thinking more about the look of the entire page and site.
I’m going to be doing a lot with this in coming weeks and months. I at least have an idea of what I want; now I just need to get there. I thank the heavens for CSS.:
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I really havent thought to much about how its read..as long as its read is my main focus.
Comment by TyCat — 9/17/2007 @ 4:45 pm
But making it easy and pleasant to read is what’s most likely to get it read. :)
Comment by Daniel Miessler — 9/17/2007 @ 4:47 pm
Is it me, or is Verdana 10px font the most popular, easiest to read font?
Comment by Marcin — 9/17/2007 @ 7:44 pm
I think 10 may be a bit small, but I am not sure. I think 12 is more along the lines of where we’re supposed to be. I’m going to have to research it.
According to what I’m reading the default that most browsers choose is ideal. Much to learn…
Comment by Daniel Miessler — 9/17/2007 @ 7:46 pm
yeah, you’re right.. it’s 12 not 10. I was in the wrong units
Comment by Marcin — 9/18/2007 @ 12:07 pm