Brad Frost

The Post-PSD Era

Are we entering the Post-PSD Era of web design? Throughout my career, I've watched immensely talented designers waste a shitload of time creating fully fleshed-out comps of what a website could look like. Pixels get pushed, details are sweated, pages are printed out, hung on walls, and presented to clients. Clients squawk their feedback, then designers act on it. They repeat this dance until everyone is content (or until nobody gives a shit anymore, which happens more often than you'd think). Only then do those pristine comps get handed (more like shoved) over to developers to build. It's an increasingly-pathetic process that makes less and less sense in this multi-device age. I'm not making a case for ditching Photoshop altogether and designing solely in the browser (where are the blend modes in Chrome dev tools again?) but rather better understanding how we use Photoshop in modern web design (thanks Trent). Photoshop is great for:

Photoshop is not great for:

Use what tools you're comfortable with, but know when those tools stop making sense. Play the tools in your toolkit to their respective strengths, and sort out a way to communicate your design ideas to clients without forcing them to envision what a fully-polished final printed out product could look like. Perhaps this post should have been named Death to the Waterfall. *[DETAILS]: Device, Environment, Time, Activity, Individual, Location, Social