Maybe you want update your online portfolio but you don't really know where to shoot. Perhaps you are not aware of what is “going” in web design, or you just want to see other well-designed sites for ideas to emerge. Whatever your situation, you may like this post.
Below we have selected 10 online portfolios of professionals of international web design so that you can see that, regardless of where you are, there is a kind of phantom and invisible pattern common to all. Look at them and comment.
4 Keywords in today's online portfolios
- Movement: gifs as background from some section of your website, illustrations that move as you scroll through the page ... Static is not fashionable.
- Usability: comfortable navigation and intuitive. That your visitor does not miss anything.
- Adaptability: we already think about the importance of mobile devices as a support to view a website. Curiously, icons typical of viewing on small screens are also included in viewing on large screens.
- Parallax effect: perhaps the most passing fad, which I venture to say will not last long. More typical of research and experimentation with the "new" codes (HTML5, CSS3 ...), this effect consists of creating the illusion of depth in web design.
10 Online Portfolios
- Mili kuo
Interactivity developer and designer - Su Jie Wang
UI and UX designer - Guillaume marq
Interactivity designer. If you access their website, you will see that the bottom of the main page is a succession of moving images. They change planes at such a speed that, for my taste, it is uncomfortable. A good idea perhaps if times slow down. - Julien Perriere
Designer. At just 22 years old, he shows a peculiar structure. - Kaiser Sosa
UI designer. On this website, the grace is the illustrations in movements. As you can see, the well-known "flat design" reigns. - Ferenc Andaházy
Senior web designer. Easy to view and comfortable portfolio. - Nicholas Zezuka
Front-end developer. I love the subtlety of this website: the combination of photography and typography. - Umarsheikh
Designer and web developer. I dislike the pixelated effect of the social media logo and icons. However, it poses a different navigation and structure: when scrolling, the page is split in two and the content is displaced to the right side of the page. - Charles Axel Pauwels
Industrial, product, UI and UX designer. I don't know what this website has, that invites me to continue browsing it. - gladeye
Digital agency. Gifs that move as we scroll.