About
Jack Osborne is a Web Designer born and raised in Greenock, a small town located on the west coast of Scotland.
Having gone through school without registering much of an interest in computers, it wasn't until Jack enrolled at his local college where he realised that he held such a passion. The course, Multimedia Technology, was split into two stages. The first was to complete two years at the College before moving onto an affiliated University. Once the two years at College had been completed Jack progressed to Glasgow Caledonian where he was able to build upon his skill set. Four years on and he has just completed his final year with a BSC Hons in Multimedia Technology.
He designs and builds simple and attractive interfaces that account for accessibility, readability and speed - all whilst taking web standards into account. Learn more about completed work in the portfolio section, or get in touch through the contact page and talk to him first hand about how he can help you.
Jack specialises in UI design, visual design, usability, accessibility and client-side development (XHTML, CSS & Javascript).
About the Site
This website has been created using HTML5 and CSS3 technolgies. However due to the fact that these have yet to be fully supported your viewing experience will differ across all of the web browsers available. Due to elements within the HTML5 spec changing as the working group decided on a finalised document, elements that may have been utlised correctly may no longer be doing so. If you believe you have spotted any errors or believe elements are being used somewhere they shouldn’t, please get in touch.
You might also have noticed the show/hide grid button which is located to the right of the main menu navigation, at the top of the page. You will often hear designers talking openly about using grid based layouts and the perks that they offer. However once basic prototypes and wireframes have been accomplished the grids are removed. However, it was decided that it would be a good idea if the grid up was left up, so that people could see the layout and analyse it.