This blog is dedicated to review everything from technology, games, travel, health, business, to marketing, and more.

Choosing Colour For Your Website

Written on February 5, 2008 – 5:40 am | by admin |

Colour schemes are the hardest to pick when building your website.

Why?

If your favourite colour is mauve, this may not translate into a website that is eye-appealing to potential customers. Also, you text and content may be hidden behind that colour.

Your customer might leave right away after seeing a grotesque colour scheme, so having the right colours can change the appearance and initial reaction to your website.

However, since there are infinite colour schemes, which ones will best suit you?

When designing a website, not only are you designing functionality and accessibility, you are also designing readability or eye appeal. This is different from websites that use flash to entice the visitor. Flash sites also have the disadvantage of not having the search engines being able to view a website that is entirely made of flash.

The colours should be ones that suit you, however suit the customer more. Reds, blues and orange/salmon and black on white have dramatic impact on how you perceive. For example, red has been used to demonstrate a call to action (for example, ‘buy’ can be placed within a red context because you wish the customer to ‘buy’ your product. You can place headlines in red; however, if you place the wrong headline in red, you won’t have buying customers. Red is a very powerful message marker. Use with caution.

Blue is used to have a calm experience. For example, some yoga and meditation websites will use blue to calm and red to entice their visitors to ‘buy’ their meditation services.

Some other sites have used orange/salmon to great effect. These colours can also entice visitors to find out more about your products and services as well as a combination of black and white text and background.

Traditional black on white background is still very useful. This is the basic colour scheme that we are all used to seeing and will also convey your message. What you can do is incorporate some of the other colours and see how they best suit your website and you business goals.

Colour enhances the images we see. When this is applied to website design it’s important to have your customer in mind. Determine which colour scheme works best for your website and continue to test. Once you’ve found a colour scheme that works, leave it. This will ensure your website business success.

Filed under: Blogging
del.icio.us:Choosing Colour For Your Website digg:Choosing Colour For Your Website spurl:Choosing Colour For Your Website wists:Choosing Colour For Your Website simpy:Choosing Colour For Your Website newsvine:Choosing Colour For Your Website blinklist:Choosing Colour For Your Website furl:Choosing Colour For Your Website reddit:Choosing Colour For Your Website fark:Choosing Colour For Your Website blogmarks:Choosing Colour For Your Website Y!:Choosing Colour For Your Website smarking:Choosing Colour For Your Website magnolia:Choosing Colour For Your Website segnalo:Choosing Colour For Your Website gifttagging:Choosing Colour For Your Website
RSS feed for comments on this post
TrackBack URI

2 Comments

  1. Ardian on 03.04.2008 at 10:17 (Reply)

    Hi, is it your blog too ? The template’s same with your Indonesian blog. But, I really like the colour :D

    1. admin on 03.04.2008 at 19:17 (Reply)

      yaapz bro :D

Leave a comment


About Me

Here I'll share my knowledge, discovery and experience related to my hobby and work. Most articles on this site are related to blog design, short reviews, tips and make money online. More

Want to subscribe?

 Subscribe in a reader Or, subscribe via email:
Enter your email address: