I can only assume this was posted to HN as ragebait. I think a bunch of these pages look great. I wish my brain could intuitively match typefaces, colours and illustrations in the way some of these pages do, but no, engineer brain go bleep bloop.<p>But let’s be real: they’re way too marketing-y for the HN crowd. Don’t they know we like 10px text and as few margins as possible? Information density, people!
God no.
<a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/fuckalegriaart/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/r/fuckalegriaart/</a>
This is indeed an impressive resource if you're compiling a set of examples for a slidedeck on the vacuousness of "design" in corporatised digital marketing.<p>Bookmarked.
I often visit www.awwwards.com for inspiration.<p>In the past there was plenty of these websites i.e. Design is Kinky, etc.<p>I also remember the early css reboots. But I'm going into nostalgia now. :)
This is nice, but is it all just home pages? Home pages are showpieces, but they're a small part of what I think of when I think of web design. I'd love to see some of the actual UX.
Sorry but this seems like yet another <i>poster like splash page</i> inspiration sites like Dribble, Awwwards, Behance, Httpster, Gsap, Godly.<p>I've yet to find any sites with actual real world UX examples; actual content, actual text, not miles of scrolling and enormous whitespace, 1 picture and a size 200 font - that's a poster, cool but irrelevant.<p>If you are doing work for a company you need to put lots actual content on the screen while maintaining elegance, that is the hard part.
Anyone remember a thing called PatternTap?<p>Used to be <i>the</i> place for web design inspiration. The granddaddy of all web galleries with a focus on design and styling elements. Really well curated, but picky and exclusive as heck. Then came Dribbble, derived directly from it. Followed by the flood of web galleries, design awards and what not. All stemmed from the Tap.<p>[1] <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20080725032756/patterntap.com" rel="nofollow">https://web.archive.org/web/20080725032756/patterntap.com</a><p>[2] <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20130328040241/patterntap.com" rel="nofollow">https://web.archive.org/web/20130328040241/patterntap.com</a>
If anyone has additional recommendations of exceptionally well designed e-commerce sites, please share them. I’m looking to build a collection focused on the segment.
There's not a lot of examples provided, but the ones there are interesting. Also, why the tracking with Yandex? They might be legit, but it's suspect.<p>This reminds me of many other gallery sites, but one of the best right now is <a href="https://httpster.net/" rel="nofollow">https://httpster.net/</a>. Lots of inspiring, minimalist, but beautiful websites.
Why are the featured screenshoots still desktop-only?<p>FFS it's 2024, we're supposed to be thinking mobile-first, and focusing on experiences for the majority of visitors (i.e., mobile), and yet "inspiration" remains "look at these desktop designs"?<p>When does such irresponsibility become negligence?<p>/rant
I think most of these are a bit boring. Not terrible by any means, but I think I prefer Godly if you're looking for some inspiration: <a href="https://godly.website" rel="nofollow">https://godly.website</a>