90s Web Design: A Nostalgic Look Back
by: Joel Walsh
A nostalgic look back at 90s web design, and a warning to
anyone whose website is an accidental anachronism.
Remember the days when every PC was beige, every website had
a little Netscape icon on the homepage, Geocities and Tripod
hosted just about every single personal homepage, and "Google"
was just a funny-sounding word? The mid-late 1990s were the playful childhood of the
worldwide web, a time of great expectations for the future and
pretty low standards for the present. Those were the days when
doing a web search meant poring through several pages of
listings rather than glancing at the first three results--but at
least relatively few of those websites were unabashedly
profit-driven.
Hallmarks of 1990s Web Design
Of course, when someone says that a website looks like it
came from 1996, it's no compliment. You start to imagine loud
background images, and little "email me" mailboxes with letters
going in and out in an endless loop. Amateurish, silly,
unprofessional, conceited, and unusable are all adjectives that
pretty well describe how most websites were made just ten years
ago.
Why were websites so bad back then?
Knowledge. Few people knew how to build a good website back
then, before authorities like Jakob Nielsen starting
evangelizing their studies of web user behavior.
Difficulty
In those days, there weren't abundant software
and templates that could produce a visually pleasing,
easy-to-use website in 10 minutes. Instead, you either
hand-coded your site in Notepad or used FrontPage.
Giddiness
When a new toy came out, whether it was
JavaScript, Java, Frames, animated Gifs, or Flash, it was simply
crammed into an already overstuffed toy box of a website,
regardless of whether it served any purpose. Browsing through the Internet Archive's WayBack Machine, it's
hard not to feel a twinge of nostalgia for a simpler time when
we were all beginners at this. Still, one of the best reasons
for looking at 90s website design is to avoid repeating
history's web design mistakes. This would be a useful exercise
for the tragic number of today's personal homepages and even
small business websites that are accidentally retro.
Splash Pages
Sometime around 1998, websites all over the internet
discovered Flash, the software that allowed for easy animation
of images on a website. Suddenly you could no longer visit half
the pages on the web without sitting through at least thirty
seconds of a logo revolving, glinting, sliding, or bouncing
across the screen. Flash "splash pages," as these opening animations were
called, became the internet's version of vacation pictures.
Everyone loved to display Flash on their site, and everyone
hated to have to sit through someone else's Flash presentation.
Of all the thousands of splash pages made in the 1990s and
the few still made today, hardly any ever communicated any
useful information or provided any entertainment. They were
monuments to the egos of the websites' owners. Still, today,
when so many business website owners are working so hard to
wring every last bit of effectiveness out of their sites, it's
almost charming to think of a business owner actually putting
ego well ahead of the profit to have been derived from all the
visitors who hit the "back" button rather than sit through an
animated logo.
Text Troubles
"Welcome to" Every single website homepage in 1996 had to
have the word "welcome" somewhere, often in the largest
headline. After all, isn't saying "welcome" more vital than
saying what the web page is all about in the first place?
Background images
Remember all those people who had their
kids' pictures tiled in the background of every page? Remember
how much fun it was trying to guess what the words were in the
sections where the font color and the color of the image were
the same?
Dark background, light text.
My favorite was orange font on
purple background, though the ubiquitous yellow white text on
blue, green or red was nice, too. Of course, anyone who will
make their text harder to read with a silly gimmick is just
paying you the courtesy of letting you know they couldn't
possibly have written anything worth reading.
Entire paragraphs of text centered
After all, haven't
millennia of flush-left margins just made our eyes lazy? This Site Is Best Viewed in Netscape 4.666, 1,000x3300
resolution." It was always so cute when site owners actually
imagined anyone but their mothers would care enough to change
their browser set up to look at some random person's website.
All-image no-text publishing
Some of the worst websites
would actually do the world the service of putting all their
text in image format so that no search engine would ever find
them. What sacrifice!
Hyperactive Pages
TV-envy was a common psychological malady in 1990s web
design. Since streaming video and even Flash were still in their
infancy, web designers settled for simply making the elements on
their pages move like Mexican jumping beans.
Animated Gifs
In 1996, just before the dawn of Flash, animated gifs were in
full swing, dancing, sliding, and scrolling their way across the
retinas of web surfers trying to read the text on the page.
Scrolling Text
Just in case you were having a too easy time tuning out all
the dancing graphics on the page, an ambitious mid-1990s web
designer had a simple but powerful trick for giving you a
headache: scrolling text. Through the magic of JavaScript,
website owners could achieve the perfect combination of too fast
to read comfortably and too slow to read quickly.
For a while, a business owner could even separate the serious
from the wannabe prospects based just on how professional or
unprofessional
their business websites looked. Sadly, the development of
template-based website authoring software means that even
someone with no taste or sense whatsoever can make websites that
look as good as the most biggest-budget design of five years
ago.
Of course, there are still some websites whose owners seem to
be trying to spark a resurgence in animated gifs, background
images, and ugly text. 'll just have to trust that everyone is
laughing with them, not at them.
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