Mirificam Press Interview Series: Jeff Croft

May 13th, 2009 in Web Design Culture

by: Matthew Griffin
Jeff Croft

Jeff is a designer for Blue Flavor, a standards conscious design agency in Seattle, Washington. He recently co-authored two web design books, Pro CSS Techniques, and Web Standards Creativity published in 2006 and 2007 respectively. Jeff is also a frequent speaking guest at conferences and blogs on jeffcroft.com whenever he gets a chance.

Jeff has been designing web sites since 1994, and after working for two universities as well as The Lawrence Journal-World newspaper in Lawrence, Kansas, he found a place at Blue Flavor. Currently Jeff holds the official title of "designer" but wears many hats at Blue Flavor. On his site, jeffcroft.com, he says, "Blue Flavor feels like something of a 'destination job,' and it's hard to imagine myself anywhere else anytime soon."

Jeff is the second designer featured in the Mirificam Press interview series and I'd like to thank him for taking the time to answer these questions.

 

If you could sum up your philosophy of life in just a few sentences, what would you say?

If you have one foot in the past and one foot in the future, you're pissing on the present. I prefer to be spontaneous, in-the-moment, and never too locked in to any one thing.

Why have you chosen design as your life work?

Because I believe that design adds value to everything it touches. And, there is almost nothing in this world that design doesn't have the ability to improve upon. But mostly because I'm passionate about crafting positive experiences for other people.

Also, it's kinda fun.

What is the purpose of design?

In my opinion, design has two main purposes: to communicate, and to solve problems -- but sometimes the two are one in the same.  When I design something, I am constantly asking myself, "What and I trying to say?" and/or "What is the problem I'm trying to solve?"

If you can't answer these questions, you're not "designing"—you're just putting something together.

Do you think your philosophy about life informs your understanding of the purpose of design? If so how?

Perhaps in the sense that I'm always all about the experience. What's it going to be like to use/view/interact with my work? How is the person experiencing the work going to feel in that moment? I do see some parallels between that and my live-in-the-moment lifestyle.

Do you think that design can communicate truth? Is it even important that design communicate truth?

Design can communicate whatever message the designer intends for it to, and this can certainly include truth.

Is it important that design communicate truth?

I don't know. You'd certainly like to see more clients of design being willing to make  their messages more transparent and honest. As a designer, those are the kind of clients I like to work for the most. On the other hand, as many designer do work for clients, the messages they are communicating aren't necessarily their own, and it's not always their job to help craft those messages—more often, their job is to convey a message that's already been crafted.

I guess the answer is: it depends on the project. And frankly, that answer can apply to just about any design question. :)

What is truth?

It depends on the project. :p

But seriously—truth is a hard thing to define. Sincerity. Honesty. Reality. Faith. I don't know. I wish I were deep enough to have a great answer to this question, but I'm not sure I do.

Can design right the wrongs of this world? If so, to what extent?

Design can right some wrongs, I believe. Design probably can't turn murders and rapists into saints, but there are a lot of wrongs that can be righted by design. Some examples of way design can right a wrong:

  • Making something useful more accessible to everyone. Maybe it's making it's better for folks with disabilities. Or maybe it's making something work in a way a child can use it. Or making something that can be used in third-world countries.
  • Using design to convey messages that make the world a better place.  Messages of peace and tolerance and  love and humility.

Obviously it depends on your political leaning, but I would contend that the designers working for Barack Obama are doing a brilliant job of using design to right wrongs and make the world a better place.


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Comments

Posted By: M.joshua on 05/13/09

Simple blog-worthy answers. Good stuff.

Posted By: Ted Blake on 05/14/09

Wow, what a terrible bunch of questions. Seriously... three questions about "truth"? How sad. I feel bad for Jeff having to answer these, since I'm sure when the third "truth" question came up he realized this was a pointless interview.

Posted By: M.joshua on 05/20/09

Tedd, I can understand your frustration. Matt's got something really atypical going here. This is a blog that combines the subjects of design and technique with worldview (*Emphasis on worldview*). Questions about truth are actually quite on-point if that vision and goal is understood. If it was just about design in general, it could be a little ridiculous to bring up questions about truth. But I believe Matt is trying to engage designers who don't typically think about such things. If you don't think it works, what do you think would be more effective?

Posted By: Isabella Ferrarin on 05/21/09

I agree with m. Joshua. Principally the designers must make well their work, in the sense who said Jeff Croft. The question about the truth it seems more a question of awareness that of capability.

Posted By: Media Designer on 06/08/09

Mmm. Odd questions indeed. "what is the meaning of the universe?" But it's always interesting to read people squirming under the pressure and see how they answer. Certainly more enlightening than the usual 'How did you start? Where did you go to school? What's your favourite typeface?'

Posted By: connecticut personal injury lawyers on 08/04/09

I was impressed by Jeff's answer to what is the purpose of design. I agree with him completely that its to communicate a message to the end user, and to solve problems like reducing complexity of a product or code. A great analogy would be: your profile page on a social n/w site.

Posted By: website design development on 11/16/09

Wow, the first answer is a new way of stating point of the Sanskrit Proverb. Never thought of it that way, but very illustrative nonetheless.

Posted By: Matt on 12/15/09

What is truth? .....interesting question.

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