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Web Form Design: Modern Solutions and Creative Ideas
Web Form Design: Modern Solutions and Creative Ideas -
Web form is often the main communication channel between visitors and site owners. Feedback is always important which is why it’s necessary to make sure that web forms are easy to understand and intuitive to use. Nevertheless, even in form design one can afford some healthy portion of creativity. Web forms don’t have to be boring and, using CSS or Flash, you can easily make sure that they are appealing and effective. To get noticed, you need to come up with something unique and interesting — symbols, icons, colors, position or the size of web form are often used to achieve interesting design solutions. We’ve searched for some examples and we’ve found them. Creative, original and unusual web forms. Below we present over 40 (really) beautiful examples of web forms as well as modern solutions and creative ideas related to web form design. Some of the examples are Flash-based; however, in most cases you can easily create similar designs with pure CSS and (X)HTML. Also consider our previous article Since web form is probably one of the most important sections on the web-site, it’s necessary for you as a designer to make sure that visitors can easily understand what information they need to fill into the form fields. Complex and long web forms increase the cognitive load for users — they are just harder to deal with. In this context, preferring simple and clean solutions seems like a sound approach. However, if the form was designed with an attention to details and looks good, it’s also reasonable to use some attractive imagery in the forms. Softmail’s newsletter-box comes from Brazil and displays an excellent integration of the message-icon into the form design. The submit-button is clear and attractive. This is a creative design. Swfir also uses an envelope as a metaphor. Handwriting in use on Katrin Wegmann’s site. Attractive, eye-catching and playful design which perfectly manages to convey its function to the users. TheWatchMakerProject impresses with a nice and unusual design. The form is placed at the right hand side of the latest comments. Frexy.com with a nice and clean solution. Flingmedia uses a sliding contact form. Depending on the visitor’s intention (general comment, new project request etc.), user can slide to a web form which addresses his/her interests. Envero.org — the web form is huge and fills the whole layout width. The font-size and the size of input fields are chosen accordingly. Although web-forms are supposed to enable users to get in touch with site owners, quite often designers risk creative solutions and offer layouts visitors wouldn’t actually expect from a boring, standard web form they’ve used to over years. Many different metaphors are used. Here is an overview of some interesting ones. Created201.com takes a look at the contact form from a quite different perspective. The effect is created using Flash. Ok, this is really different. If you’d like to get in touch with Edward Pistachio, you’ll need to solve a puzzle first. This approach isn’t applicable for blogs or business web-sites. However, it perfectly fits to the concept of the site. The visitors are amazed. Chemistry Recruitments uses a folder, stick-it-notes and few sheet of paper. Alexandru Cohaniuc presents a huge web form with a sketch and a stamp. Tony Yoo’s contact form shows the contact details on the left hand side. No happy talk, just getting to the point. And some designers need an extra-page for contact details! Qwert City enables users to send the designer a “postcard”… … so did Wildvuur.com (currently offline) — the web form was perfectly integrated into the site layout. BubblesSOC has a ribbon on the top of a large, laaarge, really laaaaarge web form. When a user clicked on the link which leads to a web form, he or she is one step away of getting in touch with site owners. Some designers try to make sure visitors actually fill in the form by using attractive characters and illustrations which serve the purpose of making users feel more comfortable with the form. Intuitive Designs tries to impress visitors with a busy mailman. Doesn’t he actually have enough to do? X-Grafik.sk with a mail stamp from Slovakia. Kgoule.com has a friendly buddy who invites visitors to post a comment. Dressfordialogue.com (the design is different now) uses a tiny illustration at the top right of the form. Nevertheless, it works. Sometimes a tiny detail is enough. Searching for creative web forms, we’ve observed some new functionalities which haven’t been that popular last year. Among them are WYSIWIG-editors and sliders. Editors are used to provide users with rich text-editing for text formatting, different header levels and images. A slider can be used to define the budget limits for a given project. InfectedFX has a rather complex web form with hints, options and buttons. The form integrates a WYSIWIG-editor into the textarea. Sidebarcreative.com offers a a slider potential clients can use to limit the project budget. From the usability point of view, there is nothing more painful than a long web form with plain-text labels and without any visual indicators. Such forms are boring, unattractive and uncomfortable to use. You can design web forms better. In fact, not much is required. Often icons are used to visually indicate the information required from the user to fill the form. DesignDisease Wordpress Theme uses simply symbols to indicate the required information. Bouctoubou.com has very basic and simple symbols. However, they manage to make the form more interesting. We’ve already written about the popularity of hand-drawing and grunge in modern web design. Such design elements are also being used in web forms as they are always unique and convey the personality of the designer. Particularly Flash-based solutions prefer this approach. Redblu is presented as a sheet of newspaper. To get to the contact form you need to drag the newspaper accordingly. Fivecentstand offers a Flash-based solution which is seamlessly integrated in the overall site design. It might be difficult for new users to find the form, though. Pointofe.com with a web form presented as a stick-it-note. The font-size should probably be increased. Swiths.com with a vintage design. The hover-effect is provided as well. Below you’ll find an overview of some unusual solutions which can serve as a starting point for your further design. Not all of them might look good, but they have something and you may want to improve the ideas further. Adorama.com offers a nice-looking and compact solution: a newsletter-box in the sidebar. Different language — different style. On Booloob.com the submit-button is placed on the left hand side of the form. Paregonta.com: cubism meets minimalism. Colorful yet extremely compact form which uses little space. This is a contact form. Sunmatecushions.com with a really different style which somehow fits in the design. Well, why not? Wallpaper for the textarea on GeekAndHype.com. Revota.com is dark and shady, but uses a light hover-effect to display the current field. Catydesign is also dark. The form impresses with a clever placement of the hints. Designorati.com: this comment form is hard to overlook. MyMileMarker: the web form gone in width. Sometimes horizontal approach is more useful than the standard vertical approach. Jaroslav Cerný shows how to combine an e-mail with a web form. The form isn’t online any longer, but it’s definitely worth mentioning. Xyarea.be: unusual and original. This is probably the thinnest newsletter box in the world.
1. Clean, Simple and Beautiful Solutions
2. Creative solutions
3. Use illustrations to brighten up the form
4. Integrate more functions
5. Use icons to communicate required information
6. Hand-writing and grunge in use
7. Experimental solutions

Further Resources
A growing collection of examples of blog comments forms by Christian Watson.













































