This new redesign simplified a lot of things

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zihadhosenjm80
Posts: 16
Joined: Tue Dec 24, 2024 4:04 am

This new redesign simplified a lot of things

Post by zihadhosenjm80 »

This new redesign simplified a lot of things, translated my very bold messaging style into visual elements across my site—and gave me a major performance boost, too. So, let’s dig into a few of these new layout elements.

Very Simple Design
One thing that stands out about my blog layout is how incredibly simple the azerbaijan phone number library is. In my header menu, there are only a few easy-to-see links, my logo, and a search bar.

Blog Post Layout Example (on ryrob) Screenshot
I omit a top header image on the blog homepage and instead focus on my blog posts and featured images as the driving forces. This style of blog could be described as clean and minimalist.

The benefit of a minimalist design is how easy it is for readers to navigate. Visitors to my blog won’t have to spend a lot of time locating important information about my blog. Everything is visible at a glance, and the eye isn’t distracted by a lot of text and images.

Centered Article Collection (in Order of Publication Date)
In my recent website redesign, my blog posts went from a grid-style display down to a list display. Now, instead of seeing multiple blog posts at once (which can be overwhelming), readers see one large featured image and the corresponding blog post at a time. These posts are in order of publication date:

Blog Posts in Order of Publish Date in My Design (Screenshot)
Utilization of White Space
We already covered that my blog layout is intentionally minimalist, but one element of this is the utilization of white space. White space, sometimes called negative space, is the part of your blog layout that doesn’t have any imagery, ads, or text represented—nothing else is going on there.

As we talked about earlier, the purpose of negative space is to draw more attention to the key features you want to highlight on your blog.

If you’ve ever seen a blog full of blinking ads, sidebars, and cluttered headers & footers, you know what I’m talking about. White space isn’t entirely necessary if the site still looks clean and professional. However, that negative space trains the reader’s eyes on where you want them to go.
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