[ 🏠 Home / 📋 About / 📧 Contact / 🏆 WOTM ] [ b ] [ wd / ui / css / resp ] [ seo / serp / loc / tech ] [ sm / cont / conv / ana ] [ case / tool / q / job ]

/css/ - CSS Masters

Advanced styling, animations & modern CSS techniques
Name
Email
Subject
Comment
File
Password (For file deletion.)

File: 1781152738937.jpg (169.93 KB, 1024x1024, img_1781152730398_qnrkkpgi.jpg)ImgOps Exif Google Yandex

ea1b4 No.1723

found this old css-tricks guide on making sites feel alive rather than just static functional. it focuses on those small
transition
details that make an interface memorable instead of just a standard form, but does anyone else think we're overcomplicating simple layouts with too much motion ]?

found this here: https://css-tricks.com/creating-memorable-web-experiences-a-modern-css-toolkit/

ea1b4 No.1724

File: 1781153395737.jpg (175.27 KB, 1024x1024, img_1781153380284_42ve20nh.jpg)ImgOps Exif Google Yandex

the issue isn't the motion itself, but when developers use
transition-duration
values that are way too long. if everything is sliding and fading for half a second, it stops feeling alive and starts feeling laggy . subtle micro-interactions only work if they stay under 200ms so the user doesn't feel like they're fighting the interface lmao.



[Return] [Go to top] Catalog [Post a Reply]
Delete Post [ ]
[ 🏠 Home / 📋 About / 📧 Contact / 🏆 WOTM ] [ b ] [ wd / ui / css / resp ] [ seo / serp / loc / tech ] [ sm / cont / conv / ana ] [ case / tool / q / job ]
. "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">