Transcript Graphics
Graphics
Web Design
Professor Frank
Graphics
• What are the most effective uses of graphics?
• What’s the best way to integrate words and
images into an understandable story for the
user?
Role of Web Graphics
• Define boundaries of a web “site” or “place”
on the web
• Graphics don’t need to be elaborate but they
do need to be consistent!
Graphics as Content
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Illustrations
Diagrams
Quantitative Data
Analysis and Causality
Integration
Graphics as Communication
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Trust the reader’s intelligence
Respect the medium
Tell the truth as you understand it
Don’t cherry pick your data
Be bold and substantial
Origins of Information Graphics
• 19th Century mapmaking
• 1850-1950 Mechanical reproduction and mass
publications
• Early 20th Century – Joseph Pulitzer used
graphics to educate illiterate “masses”
Characteristics of Web Graphics
• Dependent on user’s display monitor and
bandwidth capacity
• Consider handheld technology too!
Color Displays
• Cathode ray tubes or backlighted flat-screen
technologies
• Red-green-blue (RGB) additive color model –
“adds up” to white light
• Most screens can transmit 16.8million colors
Screen Resolution
• Pixel – “picture elements”
• Most standard computer displays have
resolutions that vary from 72 to 96 pixels per
inch (ppi)
• 1:1 display ratio (one pixel in the image equals
one pixel on the screen)
Gamma
• Degree of contrast between the midlevel gray
values of an image
Graphics and Bandwidth
• Don’t assume all users have high-speed
connections (ie rural areas)
• The more graphics you incorporate, the longer
the user will wait to see your page!
Graphic File Formats
• GIF, JPEG or PNG
• Rules of thumb:
– Nature of the image (“photographic” collection of
smooth tonal transitions or a diagrammatic image
with hard edges and lines?)
– Effect of ile compression on image quality
– Efficiency of a compression technique in
producing smallest file size that looks good
GIF
• Graphic Interchange Format
• Incorporates “lossless” compression scheme
to keep file sizes at a minimum without
compromising quality
• 8-bit graphics and thus can only accommodate
256 colors
GIF File Compression
• Uses lzw compression scheme = best at
compressing images with large fields of
homogeneous color, such as logos and
diagrams
Dithering
• Process of reducing many colors to 256 (GIF
max) or fewer
• Pixels of two colors are juxtaposed to create
the illusion that a third color is present
Dithering
Improving GIF Compression
• Remove colors that aren’t needed – a simple
logo might only need 6 or 8 or 10 colors
• In Photoshop - don’t save every file
automatically with 256 colors
Interlaced GIF
• Image data is stored in format that allows
browsers that support this feature to build a
low-resolution version of the full-sized gif
picture on the screen while the file is
downloading (“fuzzy to sharp”)
• Best for 200 x 100 pixels or greater
Transparent GIF
• Select colors in a gif graphic’s color palette to
become transparent – usually background
• Imperfect property - every pixel in the graphic
that shares that color will also become
transparent
JPEG
• Joint Photographic Experts Group
• Full-color images, at least 24 bits of memory
to each pixel = up to 16.8 million colors
• “Progressive JPEGs” gradually load on screen
JPEG Compression
• Can choose degree of compression but . . .
• The more you squeeze a picture with jpeg
compression, the more you degrade its quality
JPEG Compression
JPEG Compression
• Once an image is compressed using jpeg
compression, data is lost and you cannot
recover it from that image file
• Each time you save or resave an image in jpeg
format, the image is compressed further and
the artifacts and noise in the image increase
• Always save an uncompressed original!
PNG Graphics
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Portable Network Graphic
Nonproprietary alternative to GIF
Designed specifically for use on web pages
Full range of color depths, support for
sophisticated image transparency, better
interlacing, and automatic corrections for
display monitor gamma
PNG Graphics
• Can also hold a short text description of the
image’s content (Internet searchable)
• Best for line art, text and logos
• Files are much larger than JPEGs
• Not all web browsers support PNG files
Imaging Strategies
• Small page navigation graphics, buttons, and
graphic design elements such as logos and
icons should be handled as noninterlaced gif
or png graphics.
Photographs as GIFs, JPEGs, PNGs
Diagrams/Illustrations
• Best to use vector graphics:
– Easier to draw and modify using vector-based
illustration programs such as Adobe Illustrator
– Can be easily resized without loss of image quality
Archiving Web Graphics
• Always save a copy of your original graphics
files, including intermediate pieces, not just
the original and final files!
Summary
• Advantages of GIF Files
– most widely supported graphics format
– diagrammatic images look better than jpegs
– supports transparency and interlacing
• Advantages of JPEG Files
– achieves huge compression ratios (faster downloads)
– produces excellent results for most photographs and
complex images
– supports full-color (24-bit, true-color) images
Images on the Screen
• Complex graphics or color photographs often
look surprisingly good on web pages
– True-color (24 or 32 bit) displays show enough
colors to reproduce photographs and complex art
accurately, in as many as 16.8 millions colors
– The light transmitted from display monitors shows
more dynamic range and color intensity than light
reflected from printed pages
Screen vs Printed Color Artwork
Complex Illustrations/Photographs
Diagrams for Computer Screens
• Carefully design to match the grid of pixels on
the screen
• Use orthogonal lines (straight horizontal or
vertical lines) or diagonal lines at 45-degree
angles
• Keep icons and navigational graphics simple
Diagram Size
• Graphics carefully built to match the pixel grid
cannot be resized in Photoshop
• Use anti-aliasing to smooth the boundaries of
curves and angles
Graphic Text
• Use plain html text for text, particularly for
essential functional elements of the interface,
such as navigation links
Working With Large Images
• Reducing image dimensions: the fewer pixels
in the image, the smaller the file size, and the
faster the image loads.
• Consider displaying a modest-sized version of
the photo, with links to the full-size or
wallpaper version.
Hidden Graphics
• Use media style sheets to hide unnecessary
graphics, and replace necessary graphics, such
as navigation links, with text
Height and Width Tags
• All page graphics source tags should include
height and width tags
Alt-text
• Alt attribute allows you to supply an alternate
text description with any images you place on
your page
• Describe the content and function of an image
in just a few words
Colored Backgrounds
• Change look of page without adding graphics,
or using band-width
• Contrast between text and background must
be legible!
Background Graphics
• Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) – sets
background graphic/defines where it displays,
whether it repeats, and, if so, in what
direction, whether the image is fixed in place
or scrolls with the page, etc
Color Terminology
• Hue - wavelength of color along the spectrum
of visible light, ie “yellow,” “orange,” or “red.”
• Saturation - the intensity of a color
• Brightness - The lightness or darkness of a
color or how close to either black or white a
given color is.
Color Terminology
Last Words
• Consider goals for website! Brightly colored,
graphics heavy design might not be best for
advertising financial firm.