• Home
  • Categories
  • Archive
  • About
  • The ultimate responsive web design roundup

    Tweet View Comments




    Responsive design is the new darling of the web design world. It seems that not a week goes by that there aren’t new resources for doing it, opinions about how to do it or even whether to do it at all, and new sites that make beautiful use of it.

    It can quickly get overwhelming trying to keep up with it all.

    Here we’ve compiled a list of more than seventy resources for creating responsive designs.

    Included are articles discussing responsive design and related theories, frameworks and boilerplates for responsive layouts, tools for testing your responsive designs, techniques for resizable images, and a whole lot more.

    Then, to top it all off, we’ve collected a hundred of the best responsive designs out there right now to inspire you and give you some real-world ideas.

    Articles and Publications

    Below are a number of high-quality articles talking about responsive design and the techniques that go into it. Some might include a few code snippets or other technical information, but for the most part, these are concept-level discussions.

    Responsive Web Design

    This is the original post by Ethan Marcotte that was posted on A List Apart. It discusses the reasoning and principles behind responsive design, as well as practical techniques for creating responsive sites.


    Responsive Web Design Book

    Responsive Web Design by Ethan Marcotte, published by A Book Apart, covers the state of the responsive web, flexible grids, flexible images, media queries, and how to create responsive designs.


    The Practicalities of CSS Media Queries, Lessons Learned

    This post, from Bloop, is a fantastic overview of how to use media queries (and their pros and cons compared to creating a dedicated mobile site), as well as some useful tips for implementing them. Some useful code snippets are included, too.


    Big vs. Small: Challenges in Responsive Web Design

    This article discusses some of the challenges responsive web design can present, including the unique considerations that are required as desktop screen sizes continue to grow, while at the same time many users are now accessing the web more on tablets or smartphones.


    Beginner’s Guide to Responsive Web Design

    This Beginner’s Guide from Think Vitamin offers a great introduction to responsive design, including information on fluid grids and media queries.


    Responsive Web Design: What It Is and How To Use It

    This introduction to responsive design from Smashing Magazine is a great primer on the subject. It covers the basic concept, as outlined by Ethan Marcotte, as well as practical concerns for creating responsive designs. Code examples are also included.


    Responsive by Default

    This article from Andy Hume discusses why the web is responsive by default, and that designers have been forcing it to be un-responsive for years. It’s an interesting idea, discussed mostly from a developer’s point of view.


    Content Choreography

    We often talk about responsive design strictly from the technical end of things, but the entire point of responsive design is to improve the content experience. This post from Trent Walton talks about just that, how stacking content isn’t always the best solution, and what can be done instead.


    Understanding the Elements of Responsive Web Design

    This post from Six Revisions covers the basics of responsive design: flexible grid, flexible images, and media queries.


    A Brief Overview of Responsive Design

    Here’s another great basic rundown of what responsive design is and how to achieve it, this time from 1st Web Designer.


    Responsive Web Design has Created Opportunities Across the Board

    This post covers some of the opportunities that responsive design presents for designers and developers.


    Designing for a Responsive Web

    This article from Webdesigntuts+ discusses responsive design in terms of fluid grid, fluid images, and media queries.


    Experimenting with Responsive Web Design

    This article from Lee Munroe gives a simple overview of responsive design, particularly media queries, as well as some examples.


    CSS3 Media Queries

    Web Designer Wall offers a great roundup of media query code snippets, responsive design examples, and more in this article.


    20 Amazing Examples of Using Media Queries for Responsive Web Design

    This post from Design Shack offers up some great examples of responsive design, as well as plenty of information how to create your own responsive sites.


    Context

    This post from Adactio covers some of the confusion that often surrounds responsive design, breaking it down in simple terms and offering some useful insight.


    A Richer Canvas

    This article from Mark Boulton discusses some of the advantages that responsive design, CSS3, and other tools give designers and content creators, specifically that we should be designing from the content out, rather than the other way around.


    Some Thoughts on Responsive Web-Design and Media Queries

    This post from Jon Phillips discusses some of the potential downsides to responsive design and, more importantly, offers some great solutions.


    Responsive Web Design and Mobile Context

    This post discusses how mobile devices are being used for browsing web content, and how that can affect your responsive design choices.


    The New Front End Design Stack: The Role of Responsive Design

    This post from Acquia discusses the importance of responsive design, offers some great examples, the technical elements that go into creating responsive designs, and more.


    Responsive Web Design from the Future

    Responsive Web Design from the Future is a presentation by Kyle Neath that discusses the future of web design in relation to responsive design principles.


    To Hell With Bad Devices: Responsive Web Design and Web Standards

    This is an in-depth look at responsive design, discussing device-specific design, what responsive design means for apps, and more.


    The Pros and Cons of Responsive Web Design

    Plenty of articles discuss how to create a responsive design, but not that many discuss the good and bad things about responsive designs. The Pam does just that, giving a fairly comprehensive list of the positives and negatives associated.


    11 Reasons Why Responsive Web Design Isn’t That Cool

    This post from WebDesignShock outlines some of the potential challenges and problems that responsive design can present.


    Tutorials

    The tutorials below will teach you about CSS media queries and other responsive design techniques.

    Quick Tip: A Crash-Course in CSS Media Queries

    This Nettuts+ tutorial offers some basics for working with media queries, complete with video tutorial and code snippets.


    Adaptive Layouts with Media Queries

    This tutorial from .Net Magazine offers a look at basic CSS3 media query techniques. It includes plenty of code snippets and practical information about crafting your own responsive layouts.


    Responsive Web Design: A Visual Guide

    This video tutorial from Tuts+ offers a great introduction to what responsive design looks like, with examples. It then explains how to create your own responsive design, taking into account both the visual and technical aspects.


    CSS Media Queries & Using Available Space

    This post from CSS-Tricks explains the concept of using media queries to take advantage of the available space in the browser viewport. It includes plenty of useful code snippets and examples.


    Working with Media Queries

    Here’s a short tutorial for working with media queries, with plenty of code examples. It’s basic and to-the-point, but a perfect introduction to basic media queries.


    How to Use CSS3 Orientation Media Queries

    Media queries are great for adjusting the way your responsive design displays on different browser sizes, but a lot of designers overlook the orientation controls. These allow you to change the way your site is displayed based on whether a device is currently oriented to portrait or landscape mode, which is useful for both smart phones and tablets.


    Optimizing Your Email for Mobile Devices with the @media Query

    We often overlook HTML email newsletters when thinking about responsive design, but considering the number of people who are likely to view your HTML emails on their phone, it’s a good idea to use media queries in this case. This post from Campaign Monitor explains how it’s done.


    How to Use CSS3 Media Queries to Create a Mobile Version of Your Website

    This post from Smashing Magazine explains how to use media queries for creating a mobile site or otherwise linking separate stylesheets.


    Adaptive & Responsive Design with CSS3 Media Queries

    This fantastic post from Web Designer Wall includes a responsive design template, as well as a tutorial on how the template was created. It’s a great resource for those who like to learn new techniques by dissecting finished projects.


    Responsive Web Design with HTML5 and the Less Framework 3

    This article from SitePoint offers thorough instructions for creating a responsive design using HTML5 and the Less Framework. It includes all the code you’ll need for the final design, as well as a good breakdown of what that code does.


    Tools and Techniques

    The techniques and tools below make it a lot easier to create designs that respond the way you want them to. Many are for handling images (arguably one of the more challenging aspects of responsive design), but there are others, too.

    CSS Effect: Spacing Images Out to Match Text Height

    Depending on your layout, you may need text to line up properly with images, regardless of how the images and text are spaced. This technique from Zomigi shows you how to do just that.


    Hiding and Revealing Portions of Images

    Resizing images can only take you so far with responsive designs in some cases. At times, it’s more important for a particular part of an image to be visible or readable than for the entire image to be shown. That’s where this technique from Zomigi can come in handy. It makes it possible to dynamically crop background and foreground images as your layout width changes.


    Creating Sliding Composite Images

    This technique, from Zomigi, lets you create what appears to be a single image but is actually multiple images layered on top of one another. In this way, you can control the exact placement of different elements of the image as your browser viewport changes size and shape.


    Seamless Responsive Photo Grid

    This gallery from CSS-Tricks offers up a seamless photo grid that automatically resizes your images and the overall grid to fit your browser viewport.


    Responsive Data Tables

    Responsive design techniques aren’t very friendly to data tables. It’s easy to end up with tables where the type is so small it’s impossible to read. Or you can specify a minimum width, but then that kind of defeats the purpose of a responsive design. This technique from CSS-Tricks offers a solution for responsively displaying tabular data on a mobile device.


    Foreground Images that Scale with the Layout

    So it’s easy enough to create scaling background images, but foreground images are a little trickier. This article covers a technique from Zomigi for creating foreground images in your content that will scale with your layout.


    FitText

    FitText is a jQuery plugin for scaling headline text in your responsive designs. Using this, your text will always fill the width of the parent element.


    Sencha.io Src

    Sencha.io Src is an image hosting service that sizes your images to the appropriate size for the device requesting them. Images are also optimized for efficient repeat delivery.


    The Goldilocks Approach to Responsive Design

    This post by Chris Armstrong talks about the “Goldilocks Approach” for creating responsive designs that are “just right” for any device.


    Responsive-Images

    Responsive-Images is an experiment in mobile-first images that scale responsively to fit your design. The idea is to deliver optimized, contextual image sizes in responsive layouts.


    Lettering.js

    Lettering.js is a jQuery plugin that gives you precise control over the way your web typography appears, which can be a big plus in maintaining readability in a responsive design.


    Fluid Images

    This technique from Ethan Marcotte creates fluid-width images for your fluid designs. It also works for embedded videos, and there’s a workaround for IE compatibility.


    Respond

    Respond is a lightweight polyfill script for min/max width CSS3 media queries, to make them work in Internet Explorer 6-8. It’s only 3kb minified, or 1kb gzipped.


    Modernizr

    Modernizr is a toolkit for HTML5 and CSS3 that provides JavaScript-driven feature detection combined with media queries.


    Responsive Web Design Sketch Sheets

    If you wireframe your designs on paper, you’ll find these Responsive Web Design Sketch Sheets to be very useful. There are a couple of different layouts you can download for free, each of which shows a handful of likely device viewports.


    Frameworks and Boilerplates

    Frameworks and boilerplates can greatly speed up your design process. The good news is that there are tons of boilerplates and frameworks already available for creating responsive designs.

    Golden Grid System

    The Golden Grid System uses a 16-column base design for widescreen monitors. On tablets, the columns will fold into an 8-column layout. And on smaller smartphone screens, the columns fold again to 4-columns, allowing the design to adapt to anything from a 2560 pixel wide screen down to a 240 pixel screen.


    The Semantic Grid System

    The Semantic Grid System allows for fluid layouts and responsive designs, while also using semantic markup (which is sorely lacking from most grid frameworks).


    Gridless

    Gridless is an HTML5 and CSS3 boilerplate for creating mobile-first responsive websites. It includes no predefined grid system and no non-semantic classes.


    Less Framework 4

    The Less Framework is a CSS grid system for designing responsive sites that adapt to the size of the browser viewport. It has four layouts: default (for desktops and landscape mode tablets), tablet layout, wide mobile layout, and mobile layout. This is a good option for designers who want a responsive design but don’t necessarily want fluid columns.


    Responsive Twenty Ten

    Responsive Twenty Ten is based on the Twenty Ten WordPress theme. There’s also a plugin available to turn your Twenty Ten child theme into a responsive design.


    Columnal

    Columnal is a CSS grid system that’s a “remix” of some other grids, with added custom code. The elastic grid base is taken from cssgrid.net, while other bits of code are taken from 960.gs.


    1140 CSS Grid

    The 1140 CSS Grid System is a flexible, fluid grid that will rearrange based on the browser viewport. It’s designed to fit perfectly in a 1280 pixel wide monitor, but becomes fluid below that.


    320 and Up

    320 and Up uses the mobile-first principle to prevent mobile devices from downloading desktop assets. It’s an alternative to starting with a desktop version and scaling down.


    Skeleton

    Skeleton is a boilterplate for responsive, mobile-friend designs. It starts with the 960 grid but scales down for smaller screens, and is designed to be both fast to get started with a style agnostic.


    Fluid Grid System

    The Fluid Grid System is based on a six-column grid and has 720 different layout possibilities. Because of its simplicity, it degrades well in older browsers.


    Fluid 960 Grid System

    The Fluid 960 Grid System is based on 960.gs, but has a fluid layout regardless of browser size.


    Foldy960

    Foldy960 is a responsive version of 960.gs. It consists of some extra classes and other things for turning a 960.gs design into a responsive design.


    SimpleGrid

    SimpleGrid is another responsive grid framework that supports infinite nesting. It’s configured for screens at four different sizes, including 1235px and 720px.


    Testing Tools

    These tools make it much easier to test your responsive designs without having to use a bunch of different devices.

    resizeMyBrowser

    resizeMyBrowser is a useful testing tool for responsive designs. Just click one of the predefined browser size buttons and your browser will resize. Each size is labeled with the name of at least one device that uses that resolution.


    responsivepx

    responsivepx is a browser testing tool that lets you enter a URL (local or online) and then adjust the height and width of the browser viewport to see exact break-point widths in pixels.


    Responsive Design Testing

    Matt Kersley has created this browser testing tool that lets you see exactly how your site displays at common browser widths, starting at 240px and going up to 1024px.


    Screenfly

    Screenfly shows you how a website will look on various devices, including internet-enabled TVs and mobile devices.


    Adobe Device Central

    A number of Adobe Creative Suite products come with Device Central, which can be a very valuable tool for testing your responsive designs. It lets you not only preview, but also test your designs on the device of your choice.


    Examples

    Below are 100 examples of fantastic responsive designs. There are a lot more sites out there using the technique, and new ones are launched every day. One great resource for finding new sites is Media Queries, a gallery dedicated specifically to sites using responsive design techniques.

    Profi Span


    Forgotten Presidents


    Ben Handzo


    Aaron Shekey


    The Highway Hurricanes


    dConstruct 2011


    Merlin Ord & Media


    The Happy Bit


    Forefathers


    Easy Readers: Adaptive Web Design


    More Hazards More Heroes


    Facts Regula


    Hi, My Name is Andrew


    Sifter


    FoodDrinkEurope


    The Obvious Corporation


    Geek in the Park


    Mapalong


    JCHELBY


    10K Apart


    Expositio


    Food Sense


    New Adventures in Web Design Conference


    Cisco London 2012


    Team PAWS Chicago


    Diablo Media


    Andersson-Wise Architects


    Designing with Data


    Full Frontal 2011


    Aaron Weyenberg


    Web Design Yorkshire


    Winnie Lim


    Urban Svensson


    Luke Williams


    Upperdog


    Writer


    Toronto Standard


    Design Professionalism


    Impact Dialing


    Modernizr


    Johan Brook


    Dust and Mold Design


    Gridchin


    Staffanstorp


    El Sendero del Cacao


    Dustin Senos


    Kisko Labs



    51bits


    digitalHappy


    Patrick Grady


    Trent Walton


    Headshift


    Owltastic


    WeeNudge


    Ash Physical Training


    Mark Boulton


    The Modern Gentleman


    Build Guild


    Do Lectures


    David Hughes


    320 and Up


    About.com


    Really Simple


    Splendid


    Leica Explorer


    Spigot Design


    Cohenspire


    Jason Weaver


    Joni Korpi


    iwantedrock.com


    Converge SE


    Pelican Fly


    Simple Bits


    Information Architects


    Andy Croll


    Hicks Design


    8 Faces


    The Sweet Hat Club


    Little Pea Bakery


    Sleepstreet


    Andrew Revitt


    Cujo.jp


    Interim.it


    Philip Meissner Design


    Teixido


    Transfinancieel


    UX London


    Jeremy Madrid


    Brad Dielman


    Thomas Prior


    Clearleft


    Herjen Oldenbeuving


    Bureau


    City Crawlers Berlin


    CSS-Tricks


    Robot…or Not?


    Marcelino Llano


    Caleb Ogden


    A Flexible Grid


    Simon Collison


    More roundups

    Here are some more great responsive design roundups from other sites.

    • Responsive Web Design Techniques, Tools and Design Strategies: A very thorough roundup from Smashing Magazine.
    • Responsive Web Design Articles, Tutorials & Guides: A high-quality roundup from Line25 with some great resources featured.
    • 21 Top Tools for Responsive Web Design: A roundup from .net magazine that includes some great tools and resources for your responsive designs.
    • 10 Excellent Tools for Responsive Web Design: This roundup from Six Revisions has ten excellent tools for responsive design, including text and image resizers and design frameworks.
    • Responsive Web Design. Roundup from DesignFloat: A short roundup of other responsive design roundups, examples, and articles.
    • Responsive Web Design: A Recap and Resources: This post from AIGA gives a quick overview of responsive design and offers some leading resources about the subject.


    Written exclusively for WDD by Cameron Chapman.

    Are you using responsive design techniques in your projects? Know of any resources we missed? Let us know in the comments!


    • http://twitter.com/mbrumana martin brumana

      Wow!!! a lot of web, i like this!!!

      tnks!

    • Matt Vaughan

      I don’t think you have enough images of sample sites, could you add a few dozen more pls? ;-P

      (Very nice overview of sources, resources and examples, by the way.)

    • Óscar Solano

      If I ever manage to read all of this… t will all be already outdated, but it’s worth trying

    • http://twitter.com/DaquanWright Daquan Wright

      This is an amazing resource, definitely have it saved. My next layout will sport it, so this is good stuff.

      Great article.

    • Anonymous

      Really good article and collection of samples. Great job!

    • http://www.tristarwebdesign.co.uk Tristar Web Design

      p { margin-bottom: 0.21cm; }

      This is possibly the best and most
      informative article i’ve read through in a long time. There is enough
      information and blogs shown here for any designer to give responsive
      web design a go. I will definitely be looking back on my lunch break.
      The examples section is great too.

       

    • http://www.totalcoverage.com totalcoverage

      Wow. Nice extensive coverage.

    • Waheed Akhtar

      That’s really huge collection!

    • http://www.creativesen.se Creative Sense

      This is such a comprehensive blog post, thank you so much! Future of the web surely looks responsive!

    • http://twitter.com/webcoursesbkk Web Courses Bangkok

      Sorry but lists like this are just annoyingly too long. It feels like a dumping of content rather than crafting. 

    • Josh Nova

      Excellent post, very useful information you share with us. Thanks for the above post.

    • http://www.stephenmdixon.com Stephen Dixon

      It’s funny that this sort of blog post should come along as just yesterday I published a blog post as to why responsive web design is wrong (found here: http://stephenmdixon.tumblr.com/). I really do hope that web designers see this as another passing trend otherwise we’ll be facing an era that has been (thankfully) left behind.

    • http://www.stephenmdixon.com Stephen Dixon

      It’s funny that this sort of blog post should come along as just yesterday I published a blog post as to why responsive web design is wrong (found here: http://stephenmdixon.tumblr.com/). I really do hope that web designers see this as another passing trend otherwise we’ll be facing an era that has been (thankfully) left behind.

    blog comments powered by Disqus

Full Site |  Contact us
Powered by Mobify