According to Joe Clark I am a perpetrator or what he calls The International Compliant Style of site design. I’m not sure how to take that. I guess to be cited as an example means that I have executed my design style well. My site is in the IC-Style, not emulating it. That has to be good.
On the flip side, Joe is saying that my design is a mass-produced unoriginal. That said, simple, clean, easy-to-read and ‘less is more’ are hardly original concepts, so I’m pretty happy in my unoriginality. The vast majority of sites that try to be avant-garde (like the Flash examples Joe cites) fail to make good on their intentions and end up obscuring their content in the process. I know I don’t have the design skills to be able to pull off a really usable, visually stunning design and besides, that’s not what my site is about. That’s not what you’re here for.
So I guess I’m happy in my IC-Style. At least if I’m going to be part of this I’m going to do it well.



Comments
confine decoration, illustration, or photography to a nameplate-like page header, which could be rendered as a replaced image
And by the way, the IC-Style isn’t the only way to achieve ”simple, clean, easy-to-read.” I’m always wary of any design criticism that includes the word ”clean”; I usually hear that from Windows-using middle managers who can’t match their ties and socks.
Read my post again. You’ve classified my work as being part of a design movement, which I don’t deny or even object to. I’m perfectly happy with that. How could I not be, when that movement is based around core principals that I hold to be important. My work is part of this movement as a consequence of those principals and my implementation of them. Bundle the natural influence from the sort of sites I expose myself to on a regular basis, and that’s what you get.
The only way I could object was if I had designed my site to be the worst I could make it, under which circumstance I’d probably agree with you anyway.
So no need to get defensive.
The IC-Style seems more of an evolution where the best working design survives and flourishes. Sites will change but much more slowly than in the past 5 years or so and their designs will come from those innovators. But there will always be specialist designs.
I think it is like OS design.. Apple came up with a window’d desktop in 1984/85.. with big-ish changes happening in 1995 (win95) and 2001 with OS X.. but basically windows is what we all have still.
(yes large generalization but..)
I think this is always appropriate - http://www.adobe.com/web/features/zeldman20000821/main.html
Folks seem to want to embellish everything - filling every little space with ”something”. Designing something that looks good, is functional and useful, easy to use and likeable is difficult. As you were.