Backstage you seem very quick to crit, do you have examples of sites you consider to work extremely well?
I am not sure what you mean about kerning, as this is a standard kern as far as I am aware.

Yes, the BBC website, Photobox, Flickr, CNN, Facebook, Twitter, Quidco, Nikon, Hot UK Deals, Wikipedia.....
You could add a million sites to that list, probably 10 million, all of which would have navigation that you don't have to 'work out' before you can use it.
Sorry if I've upset the 'loving your work, hugs all round' applecart, but I'm entitled to my opinion, even as a very relative newcomer to this site.
***Actually that's a bit rude but I've left it in. I've just had a bad day***
For what it's worth, I like your website as it is and didn't find the navigation confusing at all. The arrow pointing at the menu made it obvious where to look, and it took all of two seconds to figure out how it worked. I liked that it was different
I liked the way the pictures scrolled too. I pretty much liked everything!
I know nothing about web design, but I know what I like. Your site stood out because it was different, but not so different that it was annoying.
(the only annoying bit was that it was a little slow loading)
I guess I'm the odd one out here![]()
Can someone give me any examples of navigation types that are not the plain boring "Normal" style.
cost usually depends on the designer, and bluntly how long the job will take to code and implement. Be aware that some technologies are very hard to amend and edit after the event. whilst others are very easy to keep updatedThe price will depend on the designer you choose. Some may quote you around £200, some around £1000+ and some around £5000+. You need to go through some designers portfolios, check references and reputation then contact the ones you want to use and get a quote. If you shop with price at the forefront of your mind, you will probably end up using a bad designer though (a lot of the time you do get what you pay for). Understandably you will have a budget, but probably based on how much you are willing to spend ona site and what it is worth to you, rather than based on your knowledge of website pricing. Speaking to a designer over the phone and being honest about your budget can save a lot of time - I say over the phone because you can generally get an idea of how honest someone seems, so you don't say my budget is £50,000 and they reply with "what a coincidence...that's how much it will cost".
I always try and hint at a ball park figure to the nearest thousand or so as soon as I have heard the brief and decide by the reaction whether or not to spend half a day writing out a proposal. Knowing the budget, or even ballpark budget always makes things easier.
Basically - decide what a site redesign is worth to you - you say you don't use your site to get work so maybe it is worth very little. You can pay anything you like for a site...there is always someone willing to do it at any price range. Tesco might pay £100,000-£500,000 for a site because it is worth that much to them and brings a good enough ROI (and they probably pay that much per year)
There are plenty of totally awesome DHTML menu's and slideshows out there that totally break the normal rules. You only need to know where to look
The disadvantage of using DHTML is the same as flash - it requires the end users machine to do the maths and rendering, however doesnt require plugins, and is indexable by google
cost usually depends on the designer, and bluntly how long the job will take to code and implement. Be aware that some technologies are very hard to amend and edit after the event. whilst others are very easy to keep updated
It is worth writing a good brief, but be aware, a good designer may introduce you to ideas that fit, that you never would have imagined before you spoke to them
Do you have any examples? Would love to look at these before I set final brief and get working with a revamped site.