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Taking Your Talent to the Web: Making the Transition from Graphic Design to Web Design

Taking Your Talent to the Web: Making the Transition from Graphic Design to Web Design

List Price: $40.00
Your Price: $29.10
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent overview
Review: I have met Jeffrey Zeldman at WebBuilder 2002 in Las Vegas and he gave me a copy of this book. Although the audience of the book is "traditional" designers and my background is more of a technical one, I still found it extremely useful.

Zeldman writes in a very light tone, which makes reading the book very easy and enjoyable.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is not your mother's web design book.
Review: I have read hundreds of books on web design ranging from the kinds that teach you HTML in one day to the kinds that cover the full gamut of idiosyncrasies and nuances of designing for the Web. This book stands apart from them all. Jeffrey covers the core fundamentals of truly understanding the medium rather than just telling what to do and how to do it. The Web is a constantly evolving medium and this book teaches you the reasoning behind why the good sites are designed the way they are and allows you to gain enough solid understanding to be able to explore the full potential of the Web. If you are considering a career in web design "Taking Your Talent to the Web" is the book for you. In fact, I wouldn't recommend designing for the Web without it. This book is not the kind of book you read once and then place it on the bookshelf with the other web design books to collect dust, this book belongs right next to your mouse and keyboard.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Yes Jeffrey, you can get good seafood in the U.S. Midwest
Review: I loved it in a way similar to the way I loved a Howard Cosell interview.

Every graphic designer contemplating coming over to the "other side" should read this book... and pay regular visits to "A List Apart". The coverage of CSS, Standards, and "Usability" is priceless. However, Mr. Zeldman...

While hand-coding should be a craft known to every web designer, programs like Dreamweaver (in the hands of someone who knows what he is doing)is not to be trivialized. Those who hand-code e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.n.g have an advantage only if their fees are hourly-based ;-)

All-in-all, this book is not to be missed. It does what every great book should do... it inspires passion and thought while dispensing invaluable and rich information.

- an ex-New Yorker who enjoys great seafood in Ohio.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not only a must read -- its a must read twice ... really!
Review: I rarely voice my opinion, let alone write reviews, but I feel that I have to voice how satisfied I am with this book (in my own selfish interest of having more books like it be written). This is by far the single best/most important book in my web design collection. It is honest and simply packed with useful information. I bought the book based on a recommendation (several actually) and I still feel that the title of the book is the only bad thing about it. I feel the title is misleading, and I never would have even entertained buying it if not for the recommendations. That said, I will read this books again, and will keep it close to my computer for continuous reference. More please Mr. Zeldman.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not only a must read -- its a must read twice ... really!
Review: I rarely voice my opinion, let alone write reviews, but I feel that I have to voice how satisfied I am with this book (in my own selfish interest of having more books like it be written). This is by far the single best/most important book in my web design collection. It is honest and simply packed with useful information. I bought the book based on a recommendation (several actually) and I still feel that the title of the book is the only bad thing about it. I feel the title is misleading, and I never would have even entertained buying it if not for the recommendations. That said, I will read this books again, and will keep it close to my computer for continuous reference. More please Mr. Zeldman.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: great reference text
Review: I teach an interactive design course at the University of the Arts, and I listed this book as a recommended text in the syllabus. It is an all encompassing, clear, concise view of the past, present, and future of the web. On top of that, Zeldman's writing is very witty, never boring!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Penetrative Expression HITS you
Review: I wonder how can a writer be so penetratingly expressive! Jeffery Zeldman has primarily written this book for people who have been in the print/graphic design industry and want to take their talent to the field of web (as the name also implies), where interactivity is the name of the game. Let me tell you this book is a prefect classic and is a must-have item for people who would like to get web skills under their belt in addition to any existing print, graphic or broadcast design experience or even for present day web designers looking for word of wisdom on across-the-board aspects of web-design industry. You will not only find crisp information but will also get sound advice that even today's experienced web designers might need. Even after reading the things over and over again, the magical expression of Zeldman draws you yet again to read those words of wisdom. I'm stuck to this book since I got it in my hands and just wish I had this book two years back which would have been a great help and inspiration. Anyway, Zeldman has been a beacon all along; courtesy Adobe.com. A straight 5-Stars!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A snapshot in the philosophical evolution of a web pioneer.
Review: I'm not a traditional designer and I'm not new to web design, so I likely wouldn't have ever purchased or read this book if I had not come into the possession of a complimentary copy.

But I do regularly check in with Zeldman's trio of important sites - A List Apart [alistapart.com], The Web Standards Project [webstandards.org], and of course his personal blog, Jeffrey Zeldman Presents... [zeldman.com] and have exchanged emails with the man - so my interest was more in how the author approached and presented the information, rather than the subject of the book itself.

I'm sure he would appreciate the "separation of style from content" approach I took to evaluating his book, which is something he stresses several times in this, as in myriad other of his writings on the web.

The book was enjoyable and I got more out of it than I thought I would (as it is aimed at those new to the field). Refreshing comparisons between the nature of print design and web design, as opposed to beginning with technical discussions of HTML syntax, and the friendly writing style make it stand out in a sea of good, but overly technical, reference books. It is also fun to read, and I often found myself surprised with how many pages I ended up going through in any given sitting.

The positives of the book were the honest discussion about how a designer really doesn't need to know JavaScript, just enough to know how to gank and adapt it to one's own needs; the acknowledgement of technical vs. artistic approaches to the medium; and the inevitable development of a methodology and client interaction inherent in being a web professional.

On the negative side, I would disagree with Zeldman's assertion that CSS is purely supposed to be the responsibility of the designer, not the "HTML technicians."

Additionally, I felt the code samples a bit inconsistent, tough to read interspersed as they were in the text in an orange variable-width font, and felt myself fighting the urge to "clean them up." I could chalk this up to my own personal preferences about coding style - 4 space indentation and uniform lowercasing of HTML and CSS - but I'm sure that, as founder and member of the WaSP, Zeldman himself looks back on his nearly 2 year old code and cringes at times. To his credit, he does have a mini-site dedicated to errata and bugs: http://zeldman.com/talent/

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Zeldman
Review: I'm simply floored... this book is that good. I've been involved in this business for a number of years and have read or fingered through most of the "classic" books on web design (by such luminaries as Seigel and Weinman). ALA has been part of my daily regimen for quite some time and this book has already found it's permanent home next to my keyboard. regardless of your web experience, you will find plenty of useful information in this book.

Zeldman IS the voice of the internet.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: So much more than I expected
Review: I've been burned before buying books authored by well-known web personalities. Not this time. This book was much MORE than I expected. I'm a professional web designer and I couldn't put this book down. The tone is engaging and Zeldman's humor is refreshing. Zeldman has a wonderfully open vision of the web and his advice is spot on. Whether you are a transitioning designer or a developer/back-end person, this book will save you time and help you communicate better with your team and your clients. Bless Zeldman for all his efforts for open standards and consistent web standards. He makes the case better than anyone.


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