Blog

MarriageDoctors.com launches

Today, I launched the website MarriageDoctors.com, a site for two clinical psychologists who specialize in marriage and family counseling.

MarriageDoctors
The website MarriageDoctors.com launched today.

What I like most about this website project was that we were able to keep its message simple.

Marriage Doctors
We kept the content simple on MarriageDoctors.com
Marriage Doctors
MarriageDoctors.com

I worked with clients John Vincent and Kelton Ro-Trock to create a unique logotype for their website, and a photo illustration of a local landmark that has a subtle message between its trunk and its branches. Look for the negative space.

I took a photo of a tree on S. Post Oak, and designed the photo illustration with Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator.

The logotype for MarriageDoctors.com was designed with Adobe Illustrator and I think it’s a neat and clean marketing approach for a group of independent practitioners.

The navigation menu utilizes an open source accordion-style jQuery javascript, initially created by Marco van Hylckama Vlieg which I customized for the Marriage Doctors.

Adobe Ideas for iPad

Adobe Ideas allows for quick and simple iPad sketching.

This is one of my first sketches:

Record

This is a sketch of a record, inspired by the latest issue of the Oxford American. This post was published via the WordPress app for iPad. (Update: Yeah, well, that doesn’t work too well, so I reposted it normally on a machine designed for work).

Here is another one:

stars

Here’s a wild cat:

wildcat

Happy New Year, everybody

Happy New Year, everybody.

It’s a new year, which means that it’s January and you are now the farthest away from next (insert seasonal holiday that you may or may not celebrate here) that you’ll ever be. I say this, thankfully, with all of the decorations and lights neatly stowed away in the attic.

On another note, this new Oprah network is pretty interesting. Didn’t grow up watching Oprah. A lot of behind the scenes stuff, revelations of her foul mouth and inability to operate her own blender, but I think what I find most interesting is the jay-z master class interview show preview.

The issue of chasing what’s popular at the moment, versus what is real. The concept of hip-hop evolving past the niche, and sustaining it as the artists mature as a cultural force that jay-z suggested may have done more for race relations than ….

Well, at least, he mentioned Martin Luther King, Jr. I’m not quite sure what he meant, and I hate to put words in the master rapper’s mouth, but … I found that feeling interesting.

There was a soundbite or two from Oprah about why Jay-z was picked as a subject for this master class episode or whatever it was, I wasn’t paying it my full attention as i was busy with this sim city deluxe game I’m hooked on.

Anyway, maybe I know way too much about Oprah now, but it’s as if she was attempting to justify the selection of jay-z as one being at the top of their game, with a unique experience that epitomizes American life (the stated theme of the guests of the master class series program). She said something to the effect of: He speaks to a large audience and even if you don’t listen to hip hop, you have to appreciate that his popularity is based on the fact that his message is received by so many who feel the same way.

Did anybody else see this? Thoughts? Resolutions? Answer below in the comments.

I was surprised when later, a commercial advertised that Diane Sawyer would be the first subject of the masterclass series premiere. What? Has she ever been on the cover of Rolling Stone?

Perhaps Jack Pendarvis said it best in the latest issue of the Oxford American (12th Annual Southern Music Issue) …

“Everyone knows that music is better than writing. … Even ‘bad music’ is better than ‘good’ writing. … There are no facts in music. Music is like this: ‘Dee doodle doodle dee dee dee.’ Writing is like this: ‘Blah blah blah, there is this amount of oats in a typical bin of oats.'”

Houston History Magazine site launches

Today, the WordPress-based website for the Houston History Magazine launched, which represents a significant redesign for an interesting magazine that traces the history of Houston through the lens of special issues that focus on pivotal issues.

The new Houston History Magazine website
The new Houston History Magazine website

My role in this project was to advise and consult the small staff of the academic magazine of what tool to use for the job, what services they need to acquire and suggest a template that would give the magazine an engaging look. I was also responsible for designing the Past Issues archive page in the new WordPress system – previously it was designed as a three-column table. I was also responsible for installing WordPress and maintaining its installations, and customizing it for the needs of the magazine.

new Past Issues
The new Past Issues archive page improves the usability of the previous page by inserting links to full-issue PDFs on the index, so readers can easily download them without opening each issue page. The design also breaks out of the previous three column table, allowing the elements to float left of each other, allowing for continued backward and forward compatibility with web trends and layout. If/when the design ever changes again, these elements will naturally flow to fit the size of their container.

We chose WordPress because of my familiarity with it and its ongoing maturity as a user-friendly CMS that works best with time-oriented publications.

We chose hosting the WordPress custom installation on GoDaddy because the company offered affordable web hosting with an interface that the magazine’s staff was familiar with. Hosting the system on a third party’s web server was necessary because the college does not have all the required pieces of a modern web environment in the same place, and is currently in a period of transition. Hosting the site on GoDaddy provides stability now, with the option to transfer the database of information to the college web server later.

We chose the BluePrint Magazine WP 1.0 theme, designed by Dany Duchaine of DDStudios, because it allows for a sophisticated look and an engaging featured image slideshow on the homepage.

BluePrint Magazine theme
This is the original design of the BluePrint magazine, which I altered to fit the needs of the Houston History Magazine.

Bradley’s Art and Frame site launches

Today, I launched a website for Bradley’s Art and Frame, a frame shop located in west Houston that has served customers for more than 40 years.

The site was built using WordPress as a content management system, to allow Bradley’s staff to make updates to the content and post news items.

At launch, the site’s features include:

  • A custom theme
  • Custom header designs
  • Customized menu
  • Six jQuery javascript-based image slideshows
  • 24 pages and a 3 news posts
  • A randomized “testimonials” sidebar graphic
  • Facebook integration
  • A sign-up form for the Bradley’s newsletter

I worked with Bradley’s Art and Frame co-owner Pat Bradley to develop the site. She provided the content and most of the photos, and I designed the website and customized WordPress for her business’ unique needs.

I’m most proud of the following design elements:

Bradleys header designs
With mostly provided art and photography, I created header banner images and modified the WordPress system so that Bradley's employees could easily switch out the banners depending on the season.
css3 box
This sidebar on the What We Do page is stylized with CSS3 to a create rounded borders and a drop shadow to make the menu items stand out prominently on this page.
You Framed a What
For years, Bradley's Art and Frame has been highlighting what its customers have custom framed in its newsletter's You Framed a What article. To publish the feature on the Bradley's website, I was asked to desgin a page that would display each piece of art and when users move their mouse over it, it enlarges to show detail. I found a jQuery-based javascript and customized it to perform this requested function, and I think it turned out great.
Bradleys staff
I designed this page to tell readers about the Bradley's staff. Also pictured is the randomized testimonial widget graphic in the sidebar, featuring Casey, the Bradley's four-legged family member and Certified Master Shop Greeter.

 

Psychology professor studies committed couples

Today, a story I wrote about Psychology professor Julia Babcock was published to the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences website.

The story is part of the ongoing Faculty Spotlight series. I also took the photo of Dr. Babcock that accompanies the story.

Faculty Spotlight: Julia Babcock
A faculty spotlight article I wrote about Dr. Julia Babcock.

Here is the first two graphs from the article:

Psychology professor Dr. Julia Babcock said she wishes she knew how to end domestic violence; for the past 13 years she has researched and instructed courses about the subject at UH. As co-director of The Center for Couples Therapy, she guides graduate students in the process of assessing couples who may be at risk, and Babcock believes that what lawmakers are currently doing is not working.

“I wish I knew how to end domestic violence,” Babcock said. “I think the answer is a lot of education and prevention. We’ve done some research to show that the existing treatments that we have that are often mandated by the states aren’t very effective. I’m beginning to think that early intervention and prevention is maybe the way to go. That means intervening with at-risk couples early on … I think that those kinds of interventions that decrease harmful fights are also likely to decrease and prevent domestic violence.”