
A small hosting company from Wisconsin just got a brand new site. It is with great pleasure that I announce the launch of Host Head redesigned by Maquina Studio. This was a two month design and development project that started with the complete visual space for the company’s web presence. When the client contacted the studio way back in July of 2007, the hosting company was in sore need of an design upgrade. The previous site looked like something straight out of the dotcom boom, so we helped the guys at Host Head give the company a facelift. Their original logo came out unscathed, since it had enough personality to shine through in this iteration, and we believe it meshes well with the overall design. Check out the site and while you’re at it you can do some window shopping for hosting. Brad and the guys behind Host Head do a superb job at customer service and offer competitive hosting packages with cutting edge technology.
Latest Tweet: The same people that brought us the FWA site showcase now have a showcase of mobile work. - http://m.thefwa.com/ #fwa #mobile
Archive for the ‘Web Design’ Category
Host Head goes Live
Sunday, January 10th, 20105 Smart Reasons to Start Using WordPress Today
Monday, October 26th, 2009
If you finally decided to start blogging then you seriously need to look into what WordPress has to offer. Sure there are many blogging services like Blogger, TypePad, SquareSpace and such, but none offers as much flexibility, independence, and support as WordPress does. Wordpress was started in 2003 by a hand-full of programmers and today it’s a bustling community of developers, designers, and bloggers. It’s the most popular blogging platform in existence and it has a very bright future ahead of itself. Here are the five main reasons why I, as a web designer, give WordPress my vote of confidence. (more…)
What Kind of Web Industry Animal are You?
Saturday, October 10th, 2009“An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field.”
-Niels Bohr
And what’s a web designer’s job description anyway? Lately, I’ve been asking myself this question, especially at this time when the demand for specialization gets greater and greater. In the early 2000’s when I initially got started in the web, it was easy. The prevailing identity on the Internet was that of a webmaster. If you were called a webmaster, you were like a magician; the practitioner of an esoteric and novel art form. Everyone respected that and knew what it meant, even if they knew not what it was all about. A webmaster in 2000 did what a jack of all trades does today, from designing the Photoshop template of a site to administering the database of the CMS. That, as we all know, was not a good proposition. Do you remember the first designs to surface the internet and how hideous they were? Thank god the graphic designers took an interest in the web and resuscitated visual goodness.
Today however, the playing field has shifted. True, there are still coders out there who do it all. But is it efficient? Are they happy? And most importantly, are they good? I cannot agree as the layers of complexity in web design increase. There needs to be a division of labor for truly powerful builds to come alive. And each specialist has his or her place. So in search of truth I posted a question on LinkedIn to see what other designers and developers had to say. I received a decent number or replies and with the exception of a few, most tended to say the same. (more…)
The Fine Art of Wireframing
Monday, August 17th, 2009
Wireframing is the first step in the web design process. It is also the least known and talked about. Along with a sitemap, wireframes lay the groundwork for building a solid website. So, to give wireframes some much needed respect, in this post I’ll share my own process for designing wireframes and illustrate some examples. I’ll also talk a bit about the current trends and wireframing best practices. And finally I’ll mention some of the tools I use to produce rockin’ wireframes. (more…)
Fanning the Creative Flame
Sunday, July 19th, 2009
As a web designer who runs his own design studio I find it very easy to get caught up in the flurry of day-to-day work and the business dealings of design. Anything from client meetings, project deadlines, answering emails, and managing project tasks can be a sure fire way to derail any bout of inspiration and sap all creative attention. Not that these activities aren’t important. They are vital to the proper functioning of any design business. But what I’m considering in this post is the critical importance of another often overlooked aspect of the design professional’s life. A principle that fails to get credit but one that is so powerful that it can make or break a design project, or any creative project for that matter. It’s the difference between attacking a new project with creative fury and facing the same project with trepidation and no ideas in sight. I’m referring to the cultivation and nurturing of my own creative muse. (more…)
Maquina Studio Featured in SixRevisions.com
Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009I was pleasantly surprised Monday morning when I received an email avalanche coming from my studio’s contact page. Everyone who contacted me was complimenting my site and my work. The source of this onslaught of emails was revealed when a nice guy named Sarmad indicated that Maquina Studio was featured in a blog article on a popular design destination online. SixRevisions.com is a site I visit often to feed my own hunger for design inspiration. And it just so happens that this time around the source of my inspiration was my own studio. Well, sort of. Maquina Studio is at number 9 in the list. So if you’re in need of some creative input or just plain curious go check out the post and feast your eyes on 30 samples of pure web design inspiration.

- Host Head goes Live
- Happy Holidays from Maquina Studio!
- Introducing Sparta: a Premium WordPress Theme
- Asunción Digital Week
- 5 Smart Reasons to Start Using WordPress Today
- What Kind of Web Industry Animal are You?
- On Short Deadlines
- 10 Practical Business Tips for Freelance Web Designers
- The Exploding Internet
- Business Card design featured in CardObserver.com








