White Space as an Art Form

Auto Date Saturday, November 26th, 2005

Simplicity is stylish in the right medium. At Southbourne Internet it’s something we keep in mind in our builds and development. We often come across sites where the webmaster has used up every available space with text or graphics with no thought to the visitor. When you have a site that is cluttered you can guarantee the visitor will either leave or not bother to read the websites information simply because they don’t know where to start.

Don’t be afraid of White Space
I’m not saying that cleanliness should be an obsession but white space can be a real art form at times. A small site that will continue to grow in the coming months is one we built for Elson Accountants & Business Advisors. They wanted a website that was honest, pure and clean and a visitor would know why they are there. What they didn’t want was what they had been lumbered with for years a website with a yellowing background that looked like 1940’s wallpaper after the Blitz of London. Damp, depressing and half-hearted.
What we gave them was a clean neat site that makes use of their white space. It’s not intrusive and it gives a visitor room.

Elson Accountants

The branding for the logo as Ed pointed out to me is a Classical font - established & trustworthy Leaf - memorable symbol, suggesting integrity, stability and growth. Leaf-shadow - floating leaf suggests ease, making accounting easy…

  • co.mments
  • del.icio.us
  • digg
  • Furl
  • LinkaGoGo
  • Ma.gnolia
  • Netvouz
  • Spurl
  • YahooMyWeb

One Response to “White Space as an Art Form”

  1. Lars Says:
    November 28th, 2005 at 5:05 pm

    The more clean space the better. I am in agreement when you website that is full of information all on one page it them makes it near enough impossible to find what you are looking for.
    A clean website conveys quality end gives the site owner a professional look.

    I don’t hear many people discussing this very important facet of web design. Usability is not just from a coding point of view it is also from a design view.

    Thanks

    Lars

Leave a Reply