Building a Wireframe Using Fireworks - Fireworks CC - Adobe Creative Cloud Design Tools All-in-One For Dummies (2013)

Adobe Creative Cloud Design Tools All-in-One For Dummies (2013)

Book VIII

Fireworks CC

Chapter 9: Building a Wireframe Using Fireworks

In This Chapter

image Introduction to wireframing

image Creating a master page in Fireworks

image Adding navigational items

image Exporting your wireframe

A wireframe is used in the creation of an application or website. The job of a wireframe is to introduce others on your team, or perhaps clients, to the proposed layout and organization of your website or application. Wireframes are sometimes referred to as low-fidelity prototypes, because they allow you and others to view and test a website before investing a large amount of development time into it.

Because the intent behind a wireframe is to create a simplified model of your finished website or application, you want to follow these rules (see Figure 9-1):

check No color! Use only black and white or shades of gray.

check No shading, rounded corners, drop shadows, or any other kinds of decorative formatting that might take away attention from the basic structure.

check Use basic fonts. Selecting a typeface is a design concern best dealt with later in the process.

image

Figure 9-1: A typical wireframe doesn’t include details that might distract the reviewer from under-standing organization and navigation.

Starting a Wireframe

Sketching out your ideas on paper is a great way to start, but when you’re ready to show others your ideas you’ll want to produce a wireframe. Wireframes offer the best way to show how all your ideas will work and fit together. Wireframes can be made using many Creative Cloud applications, but Fireworks has the unique capability to allow you to create navigational elements within your wireframe.

Creating a Master Page

The first step anyone should take before diving in to the wireframing process in Fireworks is to create a site map. Put some thought into the pages that you want to have in your site. ID each page on sticky notes and stick them to a wall or whiteboard. By planning ahead, you can save yourself lots of aggravation later in the process.

When you have a rough idea of what your site will look like, you can use Fireworks to build simple navigational elements on a page, like the ones in Figure 9-2, and then define that page as a master for all additional pages. Master pages make it very easy for you to replicate your site in an interactive clickable document that can be used to demonstrate your site’s functionality.

image

Figure 9-2: Create a sample page with a few navigational elements that can be used as buttons.

If you’re interested in using the master page technique, create your site map and then follow these steps:

1. In Fireworks, choose FileNew and set up a new document to define the size of your default website or application.

For this example, shown in Figure 9-3, we used 960 x 600.

image

Figure 9-3: Create a new blank document in Fire-works CC.

2. Build your navigational elements (buttons; refer to Figure 9-2). If you like, add logos or additional text to your page by using the Fireworks tools.

If you have already created assets in Photoshop or Illustrator, you can open, place, or paste these graphics right in Fireworks. In this example, three text boxes are used. (See Figure 9-4.)

3. Choose WindowsPages and then double-click to rename the initial page.

If it is to be your start page, change the name to Index or Home to make it easy to identify.

image

Figure 9-4: Turn 01 Page 1 into a master page.

4. When you’ve renamed the page, right-click (Windows) or Control-click (Mac OS) on the page in the Pages panel and choose Set As Master Page from the contextual menu, as you see in Figure 9-4.

You can edit this page by accessing it in the Pages panel at any time.

5. Click the New Page icon, located in the lower-right area of the Pages panel.

6. Using your site map (sticky notes, sketches, and so on), create each of the pages in your site.

Note that each new page you create comes preloaded with the master page elements you defined.

7. Double-click each page name to rename the page appropriately.

As you can see in Figure 9-5, the pages in this example were simply named Sales, Service, and About. Not a super creative website, maybe, but it gets us where we’re going.

In the next section, you make the navigational elements clickable.

image

Figure 9-5: Create new pages and name them. Each page contains the master page elements.

Creating Clickable Regions

To turn the navigational elements you defined in the preceding section into clickable regions (buttons) and link them to the appropriate pages, follow these steps:

1. Select the Master Page in the Pages panel and then right-click one of your navigational elements.

In this example, we chose the word Sales.

imageA right-click on a Mac can be performed without the mouse by pressing Control-click.

2. Select Insert Hotspot. (See Figure 9-6.)

A blue rectangle appears on top of the navigational element, as you see in Figure 9-7.

image

Figure 9-6: Add a hotspot to the page by selecting Insert Hotspot from the contextual menu.

3. In the Properties panel, open the Link drop-down list and select the page that you want your navigational element to link to, as shown in Figure 9-7.

In this example, we selected the Sales.htm link.

4. Continue to do this with all other links.

5. To test your site, choose FilePreview in BrowserPreview All Pages. When you click your links, you should be directed to the appropriate page.

image

Figure 9-7: Add a hotspot, and then add a link using the Properties panel for each of the navigational elements.

imageIf it helps, go back to Fireworks and add to each of your secondary pages a single word describing the future contents of the page. Place this word right in the middle of the page so that you can easily identify it. That way, you can see that you are navigating to the correct page when you test your links.

For further testing, you can send your wireframe to others, as described in the next section. From here you can take your wireframe further into the prototyping stage by adding colors, art, and images to create a more visual design.

Sending Your Wireframe to Others

If you want to send your completed wireframe to someone else, choose File⇒Export. In the Export dialog box, open the Export drop-down list and select HTML and Images. Then open the Pages drop-down list and select All Pages. (See Figure 9-8.) Keep your images separate by selecting the Put Images in Subfolder option.

You can now send the folder with all pages to others to test your site. To start testing, your recipient needs only to click the main page (the home page). Your hotspots will work as hyperlinks in the browser, allowing users to navigate through the site.

image

Figure 9-8: Export your document to create a site and to send to someone else.