Excellent Flash Designs trend 2015
With Flash you can do more than just displaying videos. You can
create stunning visual experience and offer your visitors incredible
user interaction. Although Flash is definitely not the favourite medium
for usability and accessibility advocates, it has its advantages and it
empowers the Web with functionalities which make it an incredibly
interactive medium. With Flash designers can achieve results which simply aren’t possible with (X)HTML and CSS.
The results can be creative, impressive, beautiful and fascinating.
Under two conditions: 1) if designers find the right mixture between
graphics, animation, video and sound and 2) if designers follow the
guidelines of usability and user interaction.
However, since there is a number of things that can go wrong in
Flash, it’s easy to get it wrong. In fact, there are thousands of
examples where it is the case. In Flash any experiments with navigation
and layouts are possible and in most cases it’s extremely hard to find a
creative yet intuitive approach. Flash is commonly used by designers,
agencies, advertisers and interactive web sites, and not on the sites
where simplicity and quick access to information are important.
In this post we present 65 examples of outstanding Flash designs with excellent use of graphics, visual elements, interface design and graphics motion. This showcase (mostly) presents “pure” web designs; we’ve tried to avoid Flash-based games and advertising.
Mistake #1: Use Of Flash To Imitate (X)HTML/CSS
Flash shouldn’t be used if the designer tries to imitate
(X)HTML/CSS-presentation. Long texts shouldn’t be embedded in Flash
movies, because it’s harder (if possible at all) to work with the
embedded text once you need to. Cubamoon
is a perfect example of how this is done wrongly. The completeness of
the design is enviable, its beauty irresistible, Flash-effects are
stunning. However it’s really hard to work with the content of the site.
Visitors can’t open links in new windows and the text can’t be selected
and copied.
Mistake #2: Navigation Is Unintuitive
Whatever decisions developers make for the design of their navigation
menus, the result has to fulfill three significant requirements: it has
to be intuitive, easy-to-use and work properly. Whether the design is
Flash-based or not is not that important.
The navigation is
possible with the wheel which needs to be dragged. That looks easy, but
it isn’t. Where is the grey zone between usability and creativity?
Using too creative approaches designers risk to confuse or even disturb visitors. The freedom for experiments with Flash may lead to unusual solutions which aren’t necessarily understood by all visitors.
Therefore designing in Flash never assume that the navigation can be
arbitrarily complex and that visitors will take time to explore it.
Users don’t like to wait. And if they don’t understand how the site
works they leave. This is simple. And may cost you your money and your
efforts. Be willing to compromise. Use creative approaches, but always
take your visitors into consideration.
Mistake #3: Pop-Ups Are Still Used
That’s just wrong. Flash
designers need to understand that pop-ups shouldn’t be used any longer.
Almost every browser blocks opening windows. Tricks and convincing
arguments don’t help any more. Use the screen size your visitors use. In
most cases you don’t need more.


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