Laura showed us Casa Angelina, a boutique hotel perched on the cliffs of the Amalfi Coast. Once we’d all dreamed of our next holiday, we explored their beautifully slick site navigation.
Its jigsaw-like background cleverly parallels the sense of exploration craved by holiday-makers, allowing the user to discover something new behind the hero image as you move your cursor around it – which prompted many ooooo’s. The smooth, flowing movement of the homepage is complemented by the single use of a downward scroll to navigate, with refined content that gently rolls in from different directions, to immerse you in the hotel’s promise of luxury and relaxation.
Dan presented a weird and wacky website this week for the high-end luxury lighting company, Moooi. The whole site is like a children’s picture book, guiding you through a story and taking you on a digital journey of the brand.
Each design brings in their different products, in a very peaceful way that reflects the delicate nature of the materials. *Mentally adds a Memento Moooi Wallcovering to basket*
Sylvie loves the fun of Cartoon Network Studios’ website. A striking logo fills the home page with a fun animation behind each letter, as well as service offerings that take you deeper into the website. It’s a bold move but it certainly pays off to impress the user and uphold the Cartoon Network brand.
Lewis showed us a rather different website called I Killed a Cactus. The premise is more of an informational website, in contrast to the product and service sites above.
The smooth, flowing movement of the site impressed us – again – with different animated features and a dancing cactus logo that moves up and down. What more could you want?
Charlotte brought the slick website of Loftgarten to our attention, a business that creates high-end spatial experiences. Very cool. As soon as you enter the site, you’re immersed into an almost surreal online space with a hero image filling the whole window.
One feature that really stands out is the presentation of their portfolio. Huge numbers fill the horizontal angle to represent each project, with a vertical strip above that includes a visual promoting the work. This is one we’re definitely a fan of.