Andy Clarke shares his design process for building an information-rich website for The Shared Homeland Paradigm, a political research project on Palestine-Israel. He walks through his typography selection process (settling on Bankside Sans by Dalton Maag), graphic concept development including topographical maps, a carefully considered color palette that avoids politically charged flag colors, and the use of Eleventy as the CMS. The post emphasizes story-led web design where layout, type, and graphics work together to communicate complex ideas.

5m read timeFrom stuffandnonsense.co.uk
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Typography designUnderstanding the voiceWorking through creative conceptsDesigning the colour palettePulling everything together
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