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Showing entries in the category “Web Highlights”

​Web Highlights: Unsplash, and brilliant free images

​Web Highlights: Unsplash, and brilliant free images

Web Highlights is an ongoing series showcasing some of the brightest and most useful destinations online, celebrating the imaginative minds that come together in web development to make the internet a more interesting place.

At the crossroads between inspiration and necessity lives Crew’s Unsplash. Portal to a seemingly endless gallery of jaw-dropping imagery, and all free to reuse to your heart’s content, Unsplash’s background yarn may be as impressive as it’s gallery.

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Web Highlights: Viget

Web Highlights: Viget

Web Highlights is an ongoing series showcasing some of the brightest and most useful destinations online, celebrating the imaginative minds that come together in web development to make the internet a more interesting place.

Today's entry into our Web Highlights series is Viget. Clean lines, attractive colours and minimal navigation clutter position viget.com as a winner right out of the gate, but we've chosen to highlight them not for their commitment to a spartan interface, but for their separation of content.

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Web Highlights: DeviantArt

Web Highlights: DeviantArt

Web Highlights is an ongoing series showcasing some of the brightest and most useful destinations online, celebrating the imaginative minds that come together in web development to make the internet a more interesting place.

In the spirit of the New Year, today's Web Highlights entry is shining the spotlight on a website that has been around since 2000 and just underwent a major, highly successful visual overhaul. We're talking about DeviantArt, and of course, killer design is something this team is entirely familiar with.

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Web Highlights: Sortie En Mer

Web Highlights: Sortie En Mer

Directed by Ben Strebel and manufactured by grouek, CLM BBDO, and Wanda Productions, Sortie En Mer doesn’t have links, galleries, forums, or house eCommerce. It’s a unidirectional ride that prompts the user to do one thing: scroll upwards to stay alive. The premise is simple and the input method may sound like a detachment factor, but it’s quite the opposite. As soon as you’re asked to participate in an event that’s so far from the navigation you’re accustomed to, the experience becomes frightening. It’s marketing genius from Guy Cotten.

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