UX Style Frameworks
eBook - ePub

UX Style Frameworks

Creating Collaborative Standards

Marti Gold

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  1. 236 pagine
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

UX Style Frameworks

Creating Collaborative Standards

Marti Gold

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UX Style Frameworks is a practical guide for the hands-on creation of a Style Framework. This new and collaborative documentation format combines different departments' standards and style guides into a single, unified, and accessible source for all employees. Marti Gold defines Style Frameworks for web and user experience designers, showing what and how much information goes into a style framework.

As UX designers and creative directors are charged with ensuring a business's web and mobile output are in line with branding standards, the unification of style guides, code libraries, and pattern libraries is an important aspect to dissolving "design siloes" and creating a unified brand. Each section in the book will identify the current pain points and common internal practices that result in standards documents being ignored and eventually becoming obsolete. UX Style Frameworks provides solutions on creating Style Frameworks that evolve to keep standards current, ultimately resulting in more cohesive brand and product designs.

Key features:

  • Offers a fully functional companion website with a complete Style Framework, showing all examples featured in the book and available for download so that users can start their own Style Framework.


  • Each section includes information about addressing company politics and policies to help readers navigate those murky waters to ensure buy-in and establishment of Style Frameworks.


  • Includes case studies that showcase success stories where Style Frameworks were implemented and not-so-successful stories where Style Frameworks were needed, giving readers examples of different ways Style Frameworks can be incorporated into existing workflows.


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Informazioni

Editore
Routledge
Anno
2015
ISBN
9781317516514
Edizione
1
Argomento
Design
Categoria
UI/UX Design

Sample Content

In this section, we will be examining examples of the content that might be included in your UX Style Framework. The emphasis in this area will be on the success guideline titled "Keep it simple."
These chapters will demonstrate how the number of items and the level of definition needed to ensure consistency in your interfaces may be far less than you expect.
Remember...
UX Style Frameworks do not define pages nor complex components. UX Style Frameworks define only the reusable, basic building blocks that will be combined by your designers and developers to create innovative, contemporary, and effective user experiences.
© nenovbrothers / Stockfresh

Sample UX Style Framework Categories

As mentioned previously, UX Style Frameworks are very flexible, and can be customized to fit a wide variety of organizational needs. These sample sections will help you evaluate and categorize various patterns that might be included In your own framework. They will also give owners a working recipe to facilitate research and compile the content for their respective standards.

Scaffolding

These are the foundational items upon which everything else is built: Page dimensions, grids and modules, colors, and typography.

Elements

The basic building blocks of any site. These include links, buttons, containers, tables, lists, etc.

Interactions

This section will define the common interactions on your site: Scroll bars, light boxes, show-hide interactions, carousels, filtering and sorting, etc.

Navigation

These are the elements that help your users move from page to page such as drop down menus, breadcrumbs, previous-next commands, and pagination.

Forms

Perhaps one of the most critical areas of interface design, forms are the most direct way for users to communicate with you.

Displayed Content

Consistent data formatting is one of the most overlooked areas of user interface design. This area covers formatting of prices, dates, and times; tradenames; grammar; and spelling. It also addresses the presentation of graphic elements such as ratings, badges, image galleries, and maps.

Alerts and Errors

The patterns here will allow you to consistently communicate situations which need the user's attention—everything from page-level errors to battery life indicators.

Fixed Items

Although our framework is focused on building blocks, a few complex components should be precisely defined to ensure global consistency. These include items such as headers, footers, and shopping carts.

Other

Includes additional standards for related products such as emails, advertising, and stand-alone mobile applications.

8 Scaffolding

The team at Twitter Bootstrap coined the term "Scaffolding" for items in this category, and I think it describes them very well. These are the core foundational patterns that everything else in your application or web site is built upon. As such, while there aren't very many items within scaffolding, once defined they should never be broken.
Scaffolding is much like the basic interlocking rules of the popular plastic building block, Lego®. Even though Lego blocks come in all shapes and sizes, in order for the system to work, all blocks must follow the same specifications for connecting. Because these basic specs are never broken, the individual blocks can be combined and reused in limitless ways.
Screenshot of the Scaffolding Category Landing Page from StyleFramework.com.
Screenshot of the Scaffolding Category Landing Page from StyleFramework.com.

What to Include in Scaffolding

Page Dimensions and Grid

Although slavish devotion to a grid is often criticized by graphic designers, most UX professionals and developers agree that using some form of grid is crucial for overall design consistency. A functional grid becomes even more critical when creating responsive layouts, as it determines how your various content blocks will behave when moved and resized.

Columns or Modules

In order for your pages to take advantage of reusable components, your content should be sized to fit blocks which span multiple columns within your grid. This page will define those column spans, their sizes, and how those column blocks react when displayed at different widths when using a responsive layout.

Colors

By taking the time to define your complete color palette in the scaffolding section, you eliminate the need to specify detailed color formulas for each individual element presented in the framework. It will also minimize the "eyedropper curse" as designers and developers will quickly learn the precise color information they need is easily located on this page.

Typography

Use this section to provide your typography specifications. This should include the fonts, weights sizes, and any special spacing considerations for body text, headlines, subheadings, bullet point lists, captions, etc. Again, by defining this in the scaffolding section, you will reduce the amount of documentation and CSS required to create page layouts.
Next, we'll examine each of these and further explain why they are included in this foundational group. I will also review the level and various types of information your owners may need to gather In order to effectively define them.

The Grid

Whatever type of grid you decide upon, static or fluid, it should be the first element defined in your UX Style Framework. Much like the foundation of a building, the grid will have an impact on virtually every other element on your site. Using a grid system does not mean that your site's designs will become boring or boxy. It will, however, permit you to save time by incorporating reusable components and improve the overall aesthetics of your site by ensuring visually pleasing alignment of elements.
As you begin compiling all your existing specifications into one location, you may quickly discover that various departments across your company have adopted different grids. Some of these departments may want a fluid grid which resizes based upon the width of the browser window. Some will want a grid which maintains the same number of columns and gutters as it resizes, while others will want to keep a fixed column or gutter width but drop the overall number of columns when moving to smaller formats. Still others will push for three separate static grids—one for desktop, one for tablet, and one for mobile.
As difficult as it may be to reconcile these differences, it is imperative that your organization reach an agreement on a single grid system that everyone will use going forward.
A STANDARDIZED GRID WILL ENSURE:
  • A consistent "framework" for all your pages that is designed to look good on all monitors and devices.
  • Visual continuity from page to page.
  • A greatly accelerated design process, as the grid's consistent measurements permit the crea...

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