Good web sites from inspiring makers

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Chris Knight

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This is a place to put links to sites that command respect both as a place to seek inspiration for woodwork but also one that doesn't drive you mad because the site is poorly designed and instead helps you to find what you seek.

The idea is to provide a source for ideas - recognising and accepting that we are all in some way copyists, indebted to others for our own flashes of brilliance!

And here is a clue; if the site uses flash, there is a good chance it won't make the grade!

Here are some starters - these have been added from subsequent references noted by others.


C.H. Becksvoort
Jonathan Pearce Fine Furniture
Oryx Design
Richard Williams
Cadman Furniture
Michael Cooper
Waywood Furniture
Robert Ingham
Devon Furniture Makers
 
I'm not sure I'd call that a 'good' website Chris. Yes it's very simple but it's quite basic and looks very bland. To me, a furniture maker needs to promote style and good design, even if it's not in the medium he works in.

Here's one that I think is better but could be improved.

http://www.jonathanpearcefinefurniture.com/default.htm

Our very own Simon from Oryxdesign has got it spot on IMHO

http://www.oryxdesign.co.uk

This is exactly how I'd do it.
 
Tom,
I agree with you, I think both sites you picked show the maker's overall design well and also the detail - which Becksvoort's site does not. I like the way the Pearce site lets you pick which bit of detail to see amongst three or four choices.
 
This is quite nice.

http://www.fishcontemporaryfurniture.com

Very clean and minimalist. I do like sites that are framed like this. It takes a bit of thinking to make it work with content but it's very user friendly. I've designed a few like this in the past.
 
Here are a few.......starting with my favourite furniture makers, the Cadmans:

http://www.cadmanfurniture.com/

and the greatest woodworker I have ever laid eyes on, Michael Cooper:

http://www.michaelcooper.us/

Here is a website that lists a huge number of the top designer makers in the country, and links to their websites:

http://www.designermakers.org.uk/MemberProfiles.html

and these people are friends of friends.....and damned good too:

http://cimitree.co.uk/

Waywoods aren't bad either:

http://www.waywood.co.uk/OurFurniture.html

If you only look at one site, check out Michael Cooper's work.

Mike
 
Mike Garnham":17c06ufw said:
http://www.cadmanfurniture.com/

This is quite nice but it commits a cardinal rule with me. An entry page! :twisted: I'm not keen on mouseover dots which show detail shots/

http://www.michaelcooper.us/

Terrible website. Truly Terrible. Outstanding work.

http://cimitree.co.uk/

Another entry page! :twisted: which takes you to a horrible flash site. They do have an HTML version which is ok



http://www.waywood.co.uk/OurFurniture.html
This is quite nice but I don't like the way you have to scroll down to get the page links. I just find that annoying.

Must Try Harder Mike :lol:
 
An interesting thread. Whilst I understand and accept some of the comments about what is universally discussed and regarded as "bad design", and I too often find them frustrating; I do believe that some sites are designed with quite a specific clientele in mind who are successfully wooed by such features and effects.

By our very membership of this forum we are all largely practical people so perhaps ought to keep an open mind to the sites being successful at what they set out do achieve regardless of our prejudices.

I think they can be both good and bad in equal measure depending on what you're measuring. The acid test for a site is conversion and we've no way of telling what that might be.
 
Have you been at the shandy again Matt? Prejudiced against websites? :roll:

I've worked around the web since 1995. Between 1998 and 2000 I was a freelance web designer. I've been creating websites on and off ever since. I've worked with customers and with users of web sites and read numerous publications of good web design. My comments about these websites draw from my professional experience in this field and have nothing to do with prejudices. This thread was asking what 'we' (the members of this forum) like or disliked about the websites of woodworkers. Whether or not we are of a technical nature has no bearing on whether we find a website easy to use or easy to look at. Indeed, if we find a web page hard to navigate or lacking the details we need then a prospective customer will find it harder still to glean the information that they need. I've read many survey reports that state the majority of website users will click away from heavy flash sites and get frustrated by bells and whistles like entry pages and audio. You're right in as much as these websites have to have an air of creativity and flare. But they fail to provide the user with what they need. The designers of these sites are not working with their customer to provide function as well as form. Many of the flash sites will be ignored by search bots which makes the website completely pointless.
 
wizer":3s6nzke4 said:
Must Try Harder Mike :lol:

yeah but......yeah but...........I only read the first half of the sentence "This is a place to put links to sites that command respect ........ as a place to seek inspiration for woodwork.......". I promise not to do it again, honest miss.

Anyway, I only agree with you about the Michael Cooper site........and even that I like for being so disorganised, much like this genius' brain. It tickles me that you can read page 13/15, 14/15, 15/15, 16/15 (!) and eventually get to page 32/15!!

The others.......so what if there is a title (entry) page? Do you ever buy a book without a cover?

Mike
 
wizer":3nuuhiqi said:
I've worked around the web since 1995. Between 1998 and 2000 I was a freelance web designer. I've been creating websites on and off ever since. I've worked with customers and with users of web sites and read numerous publications of good web design.

Yeah, me too - similar story :D. Mind you, you couldn't walk down the street without tripping over someone claiming to be a web designer - it became almost embarrasing to be part of it - still does to some extent.

I agree there is a fundamental core of accepted good design - the safe zone.

(And not prejudice against web sites.)
 
wizer":9ajv364v said:
This is quite nice.

http://www.fishcontemporaryfurniture.com

Very clean and minimalist. I do like sites that are framed like this. It takes a bit of thinking to make it work with content but it's very user friendly. I've designed a few like this in the past.

an example of why these things are a matter of taste - personally i hate this one (as a website - not a comment on the woodwork) , there is IMO far too much text on the front page (and indeed on most pages) and none of it meets the accesibility guide lines being both too small and too faint.
 
houtslager":28lkoxbt said:
some nice and not so nice ones there, could I be cheeky and ask -
"what the viewers' think " of my own site
http://www.thewoodbutcher.eu

umm - I dont want to be rude but its erm - well if you want an honest opinion its not very good (sorry but you did ask - and I presume you'd prefer an honest appraisal rather than a flattering lie) - Improvements i'd recomend are

First up on the front page - lose the "made with serif" logo - no one cares what you used to make it , secondly make the picture on the left the same height as the main one and if you must have a front page ( I dont entirely agree with wizer on not having splash pages) make the whole picture a hot box to take you in to the site - thus allowing you to lose the home icon withthe flyout.

if you dont want to have a splash page take the links out of the home menu and make them into buttons

on "whats in the oven now" - personally i'd change this to a more obvious title like "work in progress" or "whats new" and I'd lose this comment "This page will change at irregular periods. depending on how much time I have to spend on it , when I remember to update it , and if I am not away on a trip" as it doesnt give a good or proffesional image

likewise "links to intresting sites where my time gets wasted" - if i'm a prospective customer does it give me a good feeling that you like to waste time ? - put your links on a seperate page and use the whats new page to give a good picture of your work

on the design ethos page - whats the relevance of that coat of arms ? i'd loose it and use the space to widen the frame for your design ethos - also work on the grammar, punctuation, capitalisation etc of the text

I'm sorry to sound harsh but you have the tag line "life is better designed" but although your furniture lives up to it your website sadly doesnt - if you want customers to take you seriously as a designer the website has to demonstrate that ethos.
 
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