MediaNet Academy (2007)

A site produced as a team effort at the Churches Media Council Conference ‘MediaNet Academy’, to which I’d won a free place. The site was hosted by wetpaint, a free CMS.

The starter question we were provided with was “If Dr Who travelled through time to the media world of 2027, what would he find? How would God be working in and through the media?”. The web stream’s specific brief was to design a simple site, to include articles, host the audio and video stream output, and provide some interactivity.

As the most ‘web-experienced’ member of the group, I took editorial responsibility for the site. We worked on many areas of the site together. Specific areas of the site that I wrote include:

With Frances Murphy I presented an overview of the site to conference delegates, to encouraging feedback.

We were trained by Rachel Collinson of Rechord.

Visit Site: http://medianetacademy.wetpaint.com

Mallard Cottage, Winchester (2001)

Friends requested that I design a site for their bed and breakfast, and the content, format and structure was originally taken from a leaflet already designed for the business.

  • The site was redesigned after a couple of years in order to look more fresh and professional, provide more information, and to allow customers an idea of when the accommodation was available for use.
  • I looked at several other Bed & Breakfast sites, and talked to Tricia about the information that she wished to see on the site, particularly looking to the kind of questions asked via e-mail to ensure that information is available on site.
  • A splash page with basic information, giving an indication of the look of the accommodation, and the awards that the Cottage has won, with carefully thought out meta-tags provided.

The site is structured into information about Mallard Cottage, the location of the Cottage, detail about the accommodation, the costs, contact details, general information about Winchester, a basic ‘current vacancies’, and a disclaimer.

  • I recommended jholt web site services to provide the live booking system. David & Tricia have now learnt how to keep the site updated for themselves, although I continue to provide answers, including on how to improve their search engine optimisation.

Visit Site: http://www.mallardcottage.co.uk/

Lewis Partners (not live)

This site is designed on a small scale for the dairy and arable farm based in Norfolk run by my brother with my Dad.

  • The site is designed to be simple, with the possibility for growth as the key uses of the website are identified. The farm is heavily involved in Open Farm Sunday, and I have structured the site anticipating that visitors to this are the most likely audience.
  • Information expected to go onto the site is ‘who are Lewis Partners?’, what do they produce, where are they, links they have found useful, what is involved in a farming year, and how to contact them.
  • I have not yet been given the information to put on this site, so it has not yet gone live, but an illustration is given to give an idea of the design scope.

2010: Still hoping to persuade my brother to make use of the site info already available onto a WordPress site, easy for him to update then!

Meantime: Read about Open Farm Sunday, including a Press Pack report by my niece for Open Farm Sunday 2009 (a result of an exchange of “tweets” with @OpenFarmSunday), or watch a video by another of my brother’s (I have 4!).

IT & Communication Services, University of Winchester (2003-2004)

In Summer 2003, following positive feedback for the IT Centre website work, I was asked to redesign the ITCS website in totality.

  • I went through the old site to define the information that appeared most useful.
  • I visited different sections of ITCS to assess their requirements for information to be available on the ITCS website, to ensure that the information would be relevant and up-to-date, which would mean that students would use it, and thus stuff would feel it worthwhile posting information.
  • I designed the design/structure as illustrated here, in PhotoShop, for someone else to build (using XML). I was concerned to provide various entry points to the information, whilst making categories clear, and a useful search function.
  • Large sections of the site were intended to be relatively static, with notes to be made of sections that would need constant revision and updating.

Internal pages were intended to maintain the main ‘look-and-feel’ of the front page.

  • The central area was provided for content, with pages intended to be short/subdivided where possible in accordance with the fact that web content is harder to read than print content. The width of the page was set so that all information appearing in the content area printed on A4 paper.
  • The top bar contains static links to the main sections of the site, as they appear on the front page.
  • The ‘How do I…?’ bars on the left hand side were designed to change according to which section staff/students were in, with some questions applicable to all areas.
  • The right hand side bars contain a search function (desired by approximately 50% of visitors), a system status bar which was intended to run on a ‘traffic light’ colour code, a monthly article (‘Focus On…’), and information on current viruses.

The end product, as designed by one of the College web developers, is as on this screendump, with the basic structure largely remaining as planned, although some constraints were imposed for various reasons.

  • Management decreed that grey was too ‘dull’, and wanted a more ‘cheery’ blue.
  • A fixed-width site structure was used, for small screens, rather than the usual fluid structure that I prefer from table layouts.
  • The system has been used for extensive testing, and was eventually designed to form the basis of the College internal portal.

ITCS InternalDue to developments within the ITCS department, a new portal design is being used, but the content and structure already provided on this site will be re-used for the ITCS section of the new portal, which encomasses the whole College.

  • The top bar maintains the same number of fields, but has the flexibility that these fields can be changed. A warning exists that it is not a good idea to change this once the site has ‘gone live’.
  • In the ‘How do I…’ section, an extra field was added at the base to ensure that all entries for that section could be seen, as every time refresh is pressed, the choices change.
  • The ‘System Status’ became too complex a project, and has never been developed.
  • Each content area has the capability to have links added at the base of the main text (links are still possible within the text), leading to sub-information for that section, or related areas..

ITCS CMSThe front page of the custom built web content management system.

  • Links are provided to each main content area, which then offers sub-menus.
  • Optional sections are provided for overall areas of the site, including the main content structure, home page, the ‘Focus On…’ page, virus alerts, and the ability to upload images and documents.

ITCS CMS (internal)An example of the internal pages for the web content management system.

  • The content areas are subdivided to provide a consistent ‘look-and-feel’ for the content areas of the website. A title area, a summary area, and a main content area are provided (which can also be worked on it HTML – a method I use is to write the content in Dreamweaver, tweak any errors, and then transfer the HTML to this area).
  • At the base of the page, an field option is offered to provide keywords (providing the same function as meta tags).

University of Winchester 2009I think you can still see some of that influence in the current University of Winchester site, which is currently in plans for a new site!

Drbexl Searches The ‘Net (2008-2009)

Purpose of this blog, first created November 2008:

  • Familiarisation with what is ‘now’ on the ‘net
  • Experimentation with some of the new widgets/applications
  • Listings of useful websites, themed depending on my focus for that day/hour, etc. (I have a wide range of interests and like to experiment.

Built using Google Blogger. Still experimenting with new widgets, as I combine using this software with Google Blogger.

  • The blog got particularly heavy use during J John’s Just 10 series in the summer of 2009.

Visit: http://drbexl.blogspot.com/

Centre for Conspiracy Culture (2007)

Following discussions with Alasdair Spark, I took 40 hours to overhaul a site which had remained dormant, but popular, since the late 1990s.

  • For this site I: restructured and found new information for the site;
    • ensured that all links were functional;
    • provided a new design and imagery for the site, based upon pre-existing imagery/fonts to provide consistency;
    • provided search functionality;
    • optimised search meta-tags; and
    • suggested appropriate domain names.
  • I provided a document allowing Alasdair Spark to keep the site updated using Dreamweaver 4.0, alongside a brief training session, including advice on web usability and legal issues relating to web content.

Client Feedback
“Dr Bex Lewis has excellent skills as a web designer. She took a tired and worn out website which I had established years back and she refreshed it, not just in design, but by successfully adding to its content, something which I think comes naturally from her strong academic background and awareness of quality sources of information. I really recommend her to anyone seeking the same.”
Alasdair Spark, 2008
American Studies
University of Winchester

Visit Site: http://www.conspiracy-culture.org.uk

Christ Church Winchester (2002-2005)

Over a period of two years, and as my knowledge of web design improved, I developed various drafts of a new site design for the Church which I attended.

  • I wanted to the site to be accessible to the entire congregation, and also of interest to those who may be interested in the church and Christianity in general.
  • The site structure was largely my responsibility, and in April 2003 the site finally went live, although still incomplete.
  • From 2003-2005, I kept the site updated with relevant ‘events’, whilst others worked on improving the graphic layout of the site.
  • An eye-catching new site went live in July 2005, unfortunately with no search function! I was told that the site would not have launched without my input, which provided base content and structure.

Visit the current site: http://www.ccwinch.org.uk/

Travelblog (2006-2008)

Once I knew that I was leaving the University of Manchester, and started making plans for ‘Round the World’ travels, I decided to jump into the world of ‘blogging’. This site was the one that first came up on ‘Googling’ ‘travelblog’, and seemed to fit the purpose. I have religiously updated it on my travels, although the writing is very rough in form, and the images have not been particularly carefully chosen!

The primary audience of the site was myself – it was designed as a record for my own memories, back-up storage of images, and possibly to provide raw material for travel writing at some point.

The secondary audience of the site was my friends and family as with limited (aka internet cafe) access to the internet I wanted to be able to contact many people at once, and have them know that I was safe, plus give them some insight into what I was doing/seeing and learning!

The joy of updating the site has disappeared somewhat, and my ‘big travels’ come to an end in November 2008, so I plan to do some quick entries (all the photos are on, which is all most people are interested in, but be good to have some brief text), and then bring it to a close!

http://www.travelblog.org/bloggers/drbexl

Toby Robinson Structural Engineering Design (2009)

Toby Robinson: Structural Engineering Design is a newly formed consultancy with big plans. The brief was to create a simple portfolio/services site to which Toby Robinson could direct potential clients. The site was built fairly quickly using newly-learnt CSS (taught by JBCreative) combined with Dreamweaver. As the site owner has a copy of Dreamweaver, instructions were left so that he could add content at his own pace.

Visit: http://www.tobyrobinson.co.uk

Learning at the University of Winchester (2009)

35 hours were offered to overhaul and streamline the learning and teaching section of the University of Winchester portal in January 2009, taking a muddled and visually uninspiring set of pages, and making them usable and functional, within the University portal structure.

I have since been employed for a few hours a month to maintain the site, adding further developments as appropriate, and continuing to improve the general structure in response to feedback. Whilst the main emphasis has so far been on providing solid and usable content, we’re currently working on a strategy to develop sections of the site to take advantage of Web 2.0 technology (within the limitations of the current portal structure), to provide a truly engaging experience.

Client Feedback:
The learning pages on the Portal are looking like a breath of fresh air has been blown into them and the feedback so far has been very positive both in terms of functionality and looks. We (in the Learning and Teaching Development Unit) are very pleased with its new look and intuitive layout.
Yaz El-Hakim, March 2009
Director of Teaching and Learning, University of Winchester

Visit: http://www.winchester.ac.uk/learning