About
Being created to help others like ourselves and to foster free trade of hypertext interface design information, webgraphics will always remain free of advertising and other user dehancements.
Popularity discrimination is avoided amongst the authors (heck, who are we any ways?) so if you're holding a great idea for this site or think you'd make a great weblog poster, by all means let us know.
Here are the folks currently involved:
Nathan Steiner
registered the domain, does the interface xhtml/php/javascript/css, and tries his best to do justice to Arturo’s design work.
Arturo Rodriguez
designed this entire site (more than once), operates a small web design company with Nathan, and posts to this weblog.
Andy Edmonds
was an early weblogger with his "psyberspace", covering interface design, psychology, programming and a slew of other very brainy stuff. His site is currently known as Surfmind.
Francois Jordaan
contributes from the UK and also has an excellent weblog of his own.
Todd Dominey
is generous enough to post at webgraphics as well. His portfolio is a stunning example of flash at it's finest, and he also runs the whatdoiknow weblog.
Meryl Evans
has a great weblog, and does a lot of writing, find out more about Meryl here.
David Lindquist
has several excellent tips and tutorials on his web site gazingus.
Evan Rose
writes on many interesting subjects in his logically named weblog: evanrose.com.
Dru Sellers
brings a slightly different perspective to webgraphics, he does not yet have a weblog to point to, and is not a web designer or programmer by trade, yet his interest in the topics discussed here are obviously well rooted. We welcome his fresh perspective.
Robert Occhialini
was one of the pioneer webloggers with his site bump.net. Robert’s experience lies primarily in programming and too many technical acronyms to list here.
Brian Donovan
is an independent web programmer/researcher with a number of interesting projects and a great weblog at Monokromatik.
Michael Angeles
is a site developer and information architect who writes the iaslash weblog. His personal site studioid is where you can find out more about papers and projects he’s been involved in.
Nick Finck
is a web design and development craftsman. He has been writing HTML since 1994. He is also the Editor in Chief of Digital Web Magazine. He has authored and co-authored many articles for A List Apart, The Web Standards Project, WebReview as well as for his own Digital Web Magazine.
Dan Benjamin
is a programmer, web developer, writer, and cigar maven. He spends his spare time publishing the Hivelogic Narrative and worrying about the deterioration of the modern dress code.
James Buckley
is a jack of all trades of the web design world, knowing just enough to be dangerous. He currently maintains a weblog and a tragically outdated (his words) portfolio.
Joshua Kaufman
is a web builder who runs a personal weblog where he shares his thoughts about usability, web design, information architecture and user experience.
Liorean
(David Andersson) is a Swedish medical student with webdesign as hobby. His specialities are javascripting, DOM and CSS. He's also the author of some nifty bookmarklets, intended for web designers.
Pixy
(Petr Stanicek) is Czech web designer and web developer. He publishes mostly in the czech language, especially articles about CSS, JS, and web usability. He’s author of the book “Cascading Style sheets - The Complete Guide” (Czech only so far) and the Dogma W4 Manifesto. On his web, several articles, bookmarlets and applications are available in english, too. Update: New Pixy website wellstyled has latest and greatest Pixy articles and such.
Dan Rubin
is a graphic designer and web developer, and a big fan of minimal design, XHTML and CSS. He spends his free time publishing his personal weblog, SuperfluousBanter, and his design firm, webgraph, specializes in brand development and building usable, accessible web sites. He toys with AppleScript in his spare time.
Radu Darvas
once studied arts, but he much prefers playing with CSS than painting. He is also looking for a job offer
Andreas Bovens
is a researcher Japanese Studies with a strong interest in xhtml/css/accessibility issues. He also runs a small weblog about internet related copyright issues in Japan.
Ben Darlow
likes to do interesting things with PHP and CSS, although modesty prevents him describing himself as a designer. He lives in hope that one day the web will be a place accessible to all.
Noel Jackson
is a programmer, accessibility believer, web developer, and business owner. Besides working for Relevantly, he enjoys writing on his weblog and admiring beauty. Noel has only had two dreams in HTML, one XHTML 1.0 Strict, the other HTML 4.01.
Scott Partee
has been wrestling with the web since the HTML 2.x days, and currently provides architectural direction for a Fortune 100 telecommunication firm's online and offline properties. He believes content is key. His web site is halfass.com
Russ Weakley
is a web designer who believes in web standards and is slightly obsessed with CSS. He runs MaxDesign and is chair of the Web Standards group.
Tony Stephens
is a designer, developer and UX architect that is frankly obsessed with all aspects of the web. He has the obligatory blog and is more than willing to talk about anything at perverse length.
Silus Grok
is a serial entrepreneur and a consultant to non-profits, smaller businesses, and municipalities on brand and engagement issues. His clients call him their "conscience" and "voice of reason". When asked about his personal site he mumbled "soon, soon, I promise" and ran from the room. In the mean time, he can be found haunting the virtual corridors over at TRIBE.net. (search for:Silus Grok)
huphtur
is just a skate nerd who spends too much time lurking the web instead of trying to learn switch tre flips.
George Penston
is a San Francisco-based User Experience Designer and an authority of all things Apple and Adobe. With an extensive background in print production and design, George segued into Web and interface design. George spends his spare time playing video games and learning of emerging technologies that may prove valuable to creatives.
Miraz Jordan
Resident in Wellington, New Zealand, Miraz is most often found with her Powerbook and at least one cat on her lap. She supports Mac users, writes and maintains valid, accessible websites and is always learning.
Jason Santa Maria
Jason Santa Maria is presumably a designer, fledgeling writer, and cobbler. You may or may not agree with the things he says on his site.
Kevin Byrd
Kevin is a designer, photographer, and architecture aficionado. Mostly he is found loitering in Decatur, sipping sweet tea or engaged in a serious game of bocce.
Yasuhisa Hasegawa
Yasuhisa is a designer and writer based in Tokyo, Japan. He is author of two books and wrote a few web design related articles in both English and Japanese.
Alessandro Fulciniti
Alessandro Fulciniti is a writer for the webdesign italian portal pro.html.it. He's a passionate CSS and javascript author, and he believes that knowledge, webstandards and creativity are the most powerful tools for better web development.
Chris Wilson
is a resident of Atlanta, GA, where he carefully hand-crafts PHP and Java web apps for Adair Systems when he's not working for the man. He spends his spare time trying to keep his dogs from destroying the house. He worked with the Twinsparc'ers to unleash Say-So upon the unsuspecting Internet.