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John Mullins is an aspiring Web Designer. He studies at Cincninnati State Technical and Community College.

Contact him via email @jjmullins2000@gmail.com

This website is a great resource for people who want to learn html and css and start designing without paying a dime. It lists 10 different free alternatives to Dreamweaver if you are trying to save money for the future, but eventually you are going to want to purchase Dreamweaver if you plan on being a web designer.

This is a perfect website for web designers to learn web design hacks that will help them solve problems when they come across them while designing. The biggest tip I would take from this website is to focus on responsive design, because 56% of people who are on the web nowadays are using mobile, so the websites we are designing should be able to look good on mobile as well as on a desktop.

This is a great website for beginning designers to see the power of what HTML5 and CSS is capable of. I would not recommend just stealing the code and not learning what each HTML element is and what it stands for. This is still a great resource for beginning designers, because it allows you see how to change colors, make changes to boxes within the page, and learn how to change the look of a webpage.

Mostly everyone know NBA has a webpage, but this is a great webpage for web designers. I believe this is a great page for designers to look at when you are struggling with dead space in your website, because NBA’s website has plenty of content, and has a large amount of headers and sub headers, as well as images to get rid of dead space, but doesn’t overwhelm viewers with too much content.

This is a great resource for designers who want to know where web design started. If you are choosing to pursue web design for the future it would be a good idea to know where is all started, because it is always helpful to have knowledge that isn’t exactly needed, because it can benefit you later.