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– Ponderings & code by Drew McLellan –

– Live from The Internets since 2003 –

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The IC-Style

22 September 2003

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.

- Drew McLellan

Comments

  1. § Jesse: I thought the armadillo on the head was rather original...
  2. § Eduardo: OMG, Is that a C-Section or an Appendectomy that Mr Clark has goin on?
  3. § Jean-François Bastien: Jesse, of course the armadillo is original, but as per point IX:

    confine decoration, illustration, or photography to a nameplate-like page header, which could be rendered as a replaced image
  4. § Joe Clark: At no time did I use any terms remotely resembling ”mass-produced” or ”unoriginal.” Do some more reading on graphic-design styles. Members of a movement do not necessarily know they are part of it any more than butterflies know they are flying through air.

    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.
  5. § Drew: Hey, quit the mud-slinging. Play nice.

    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.
  6. § Jesse: Members of a movement do not necessarily know they are part of it any more than butterflies know they are flying through air.

    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..)
  7. § K: I think most people know as much about design as they know what’s going on underneath the hood of their auto.

    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.

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About Drew McLellan

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Drew McLellan has been hacking on the web since around 1996 following an unfortunate incident with a margarine tub. Since then he’s spread himself between both front- and back-end development projects, and now is Director and Senior Web Developer at edgeofmyseat.com in Maidenhead, UK (GEO: 51.5217, -0.7177). Prior to this, Drew was a Web Developer for Yahoo!, and before that primarily worked as a technical lead within design and branding agencies for clients such as Nissan, Goodyear Dunlop, Siemens/Bosch, Cadburys, ICI Dulux and Virgin.net. Somewhere along the way, Drew managed to get himself embroiled with Dreamweaver and was made an early Macromedia Evangelist for that product. This lead to book deals, public appearances, fame, glory, and his eventual downfall.

Picking himself up again, Drew is now a strong advocate for best practises, and stood as Group Lead for The Web Standards Project 2006-08. He has had articles published by A List Apart, Adobe, and O’Reilly Media’s XML.com, mostly due to mistaken identity. Drew is a proponent of the lower-case semantic web, and is currently expending energies in the direction of the microformats movement, with particular interests in making parsers an off-the-shelf commodity and developing simple UI conventions. He writes here at all in the head and, with a little help from his friends, at 24 ways.