Books Giveaway: Comment and Win!

Advertisement

As you may or may not know, we like to smash things. Apart from releasing free icons, themes and wallpapers, every now and again we pick a dozen of professional design and web-development-books, buy them and give them away to our readers — for free, of course. We genuinely appreciate our community and respect our readers for reading us, and now we are giving something back.

In this post we are giving away 10 professional web design-related books — the books cover the topics CSS, usability, user interface design, innovation, web navigation, web form design and JavaScript programming. Hopefully, the winners of the books will be able to widen their horizon in web development and create more effective, more user-friendly and more beautiful web designs.

Don’t forget to subscribe to our RSS-feed Subscribe to our RSS-feed — more giveaways are planned in the near future.

How can I participate?

To participate, you have to

  1. choose one book in the table below which you like most,
  2. write something nice in the comment to this post (one word is enough) and write the number of the book on the next line.

Please notice that

  • participants can post comments until the 13th of October 2008. The comments will be closed on the 13th of June at 00:01 CET.
  • the winners will be determined by a random generator; for each book only the group of visitors who’d like to have the same book will be considered,
  • only participants who’ve selected one book can participate
  • make sure that you fill your e-mail in the comment field correctly, so we can contact you afterwards.

Books You Can Win

# Cover Title
by Author
Description
1 Screenshot Ajax: The Definitive Guide
by Anthony Holdener
This book explains how to use JavaScript, XML, CSS, and XHTML, along with the XMLHttpRequest object, to build browser-based web applications that function like desktop programs.
2 Screenshot Pro JavaScript Techniques
by John Resig
This book focuses on fundamental, vital topics – what modern JavaScripting is (and isn’t), the current state of browser support, and pitfalls to be wary of.
3 Screenshot Thinking with Type
by Ellen Lupton
This book provides clear and concise guidance for anyone learning or brushing up on their typographic skills.
4 Screenshot Geometry of Design: Studies in Proportion and Composition
by Kimberley Elam
Takes a close look at a broad range of 20th-century examples of design, architecture and illustration, revealing underlying geometric structures in their compositions.
5 Screenshot Photoshop CS3 Bible
by Laurie Ulrich Fuller, Robert C. Fuller
An international bestseller in which the authors show you how to master every aspect of Photoshop.
6 Screenshot Letterhead and Logo Design: v. 9
by Mine
Logos, labels, business cards, envelopes, the creative techniques: all around the logo design.
7 Books Giveaway Designing Web Navigation
by James Kalbach
Offers a fresh look at a fundamental topic of web site development: navigation design.
8 Books Giveaway

The CSS Anthology: 101 Essential Tips, Tricks and Hacks
by Rachel Andrew
Shows how to apply CSS to solve over 101 common Web Development challenges.
9 Books Giveaway

Layers: The Complete Guide to Photoshop’s Most Powerful Feature
by Matt Kloskowski
If you want to finally understand layers in Photoshop, this book is the one you’ve been waiting for.
10 Books Giveaway

Bierut: 79 Short Essays on Design
by Michael Bierut
Some insightful design considerations from the editor of Design Observer.

1. Ajax: The Definitive Guide

Ajax: The Definitive Guide by Anthony T. Holdener

Books Giveaway

Ajax builds on older technologies and techniques but reaches a tipping point where the results are new. This book gives you a boost to this next stage of web application development, teaching you how tried-and-true web standards not only make Ajax possible, but why developing with them is faster, easier and cheaper. Learn to build browser-based applications that function like desktop programs.

This book explains how to use JavaScript, XML, CSS, and XHTML, along with the XMLHttpRequest object, to build browser-based web applications that function like desktop programs. You get a complete background on what goes into today’s web sites and applications, and learn to leverage these tools along with Ajax for advanced browser searching, web services, mashups, and more. You discover how to turn a web browser and web site into a true application, and why developing with Ajax is faster, easier and cheaper.

2. Pro JavaScript Techniques

Pro JavaScript Techniques by John Resig

Screenshot

The book is organized into four sections: Modern JavaScript development – using JavaScript the object-oriented way, creating reusable code, plus testing and debugging DOM scripting – updating content and styles, plus events, and effect and event libraries Ajax – how Ajax works, overcoming problems, and using libraries to speed up development of Ajax applications The future of JavaScript – looking at cutting edge topics like JSON, HTML 5, and more.

All concepts are backed up by real-world examples and case studies, and John provides numerous reusable functions and classes to save you time in your development. There are also up-to-date reference appendixes for the DOM, events, browser support (including IE7), and frameworks – so you can look up specific details quickly and easily.

3. Thinking with Type

Thinking with Type by Ellen Lupton

Screenshot

The organization of letters on a blank sheet — or screen — is the most basic challenge facing anyone who practices design. What type of font to use? How big? How should those letters, words, and paragraphs be aligned, spaced, ordered, shaped, and otherwise manipulated? In this book Ellen Lupton provides clear and concise guidance for anyone learning or brushing up on their typographic skills.

The book is divided into three sections: letter, text, and grid. Each section begins with an easy-to-grasp essay that reviews historical, technological, and theoretical concepts, and is then followed by a set of practical exercises that bring the material covered to life. Sections conclude with examples of work by leading practitioners that demonstrate creative possibilities (along with some classic no-no’s to avoid).

4. Geometry of Design: Studies in Proportion and Composition

Geometry of Design: Studies in Proportion and Composition by Kimberly Elam

Screenshot

This book presents a mathematical explanation of how art works presented in a manner we can all understand. Kimberly Elam takes the reader on a geometrical journey, lending insight and coherence to the design process by exploring the visual relationships that have foundations in mathematics as well as the essential qualities of life. The book takes a close look at a broad range of twentieth-century examples of design, architecture, and illustration (from the Barcelona chair to the Musica Viva poster, from the Braun handblender to the Conico kettle), revealing underlying geometric structures in their compositions.

Explanations and techniques of visual analysis make the inherent mathematical relationships evident and a must-have for anyone involved in graphic arts. The book focuses not only on the classic systems of proportioning, such as the golden section and root rectangles, but also on less well known proportioning systems such as the Fibonacci Series. Through detailed diagrams these geometric systems are brought to life giving an effective insight into the design process.

5. Photoshop CS3 Bible

Photoshop CS3 Bible by Laurie Ulrich Fuller, Robert C. Fuller

Screenshot

This practicual guide is supposed to help you to master Adobe Photoshop CS3. You’ll learn to work with the CS3 interface and many new and improved commands — including enhanced selection tools, a more powerful Clone Stamp, new Vanishing Point capabilities, and added Animation and Timeline features.

You’ll also discover how to create super special effects, build great composite images, and perform true miracles with your digital and 3D images, whether they’re bound for print, the Web, or handheld devices. Learn how to master the new workspace, from the toolbox to the palettes to the Bridge, correct color and lighting, restore damaged images of all kinds, take control of your images with selections, masks, and filters, bring words into your pictures and make text flow along a path and explore advanced topics, tricks, and specialized techniques.

6. Letterhead and Logo Design: v. 9

Letterhead and Logo Design: v. 9 by Mine

Screenshot

No. 9 of the best-selling “Letterhead and Logo Design” series features the most creative and inspiring work in the field from well-known design leaders, new design firms, and cutting-edge artists. It includes everything identity, from logos to labels, business cards to envelopes, and the creative techniques and full-colour images portrayed in this broad range of work will inspire new design solutions for age-old challenges that beg for a fresh approach.

7. Designing Web Navigation

Designing Web Navigation: Optimizing the User Experience by James Kalbach

Screenshot

Thoroughly rewritten for today’s web environment, this book offers a fresh look at a fundamental topic of site navigation design. Amid all the changes to the Web in the past decade, the basic problems of creating a good web navigation system remain. Designing Web Navigation demonstrates that good navigation is not about technology — it’s about the ways people find information, and how you guide them.

8. The CSS Anthology

The CSS Anthology: 101 Essential Tips, Tricks & Hacks by Rachel Andrew

Screenshot

The CSS Anthology: 101 Essential Tips, Tricks & Hacks is a compilation of best practice solutions to the most challenging CSS problems. The second edition of this best-selling book, now in full color, has been completely revised and updated to cover the latest techniques and newer browsers, including Firefox 2 and Internet Explorer 7.

It’s the most complete question-and-answer book on CSS, with over 100 tutorials that’ll show you how to gain more control over the appearance of your web page, create sophisticated Web page navigation controls, design for today’s alternative browsing devices including phones and screen readers, and much more.

9. Layers: The Complete Guide to Photoshop’s Most Powerful Feature

Layers: The Complete Guide to Photoshop’s Most Powerful Feature by Matt Kloskowski

Screenshot

Layers are the key to understanding Adobe Photoshop and this book shows you exactly how you can use them in your works. You’ll learn about working with and managing multiple layers, building multiple layered images, blending layers together, exactly which of the 25+ Blend Modes you need to worry about (there’s just a few), Layer Masking and just how easy it is, using layers to enhance and retouch your photos and all of the tips and tricks that make using layers a breeze.

10. Seventy-nine Short Essays on Design

Seventy-nine Short Essays on Design by Michael Bierut

Screenshot

The 272-page hardcover book brings together twenty years of essays on subjects that range from New York’s faulty “Push for Walk Signal” buttons, to the disappearance of the AT&T logo, to the implications of Vladimir Nabokov’s Pale Fire for interaction designers.

Many of the pieces first appeared on Design Observer, the popular blog that Michael edits with Jessica Helfand and Bill Drenttel, including “Designing Under the Influence,” “I Hate ITC Garamond,” and “The Road to Hell: Now Paved with Innovation!” Seventy-nine Essays also includes pieces that appeared elsewhere and pieces that have never been published in other collections, like “Waiting for Permission,” “How to Become Famous” and “Ten Footnotes on a Manifesto.”

We love high-quality content and we care about little details. We believe that good content and design are crafts worth sharpening. Located in the lovely city of Freiburg, Germany. Mostly Vitaly (vf), Iris (il), Stephan (sp) and Sven (sl).

  1. 1101

    #1

    RSS FTW :D

    0
  2. 1102

    I’d like to thank you in advance for the free book.

    #5

    0
  3. 1103

    Lex@magnumopusdesigns

    October 8th, 2008 8:29 am

    thanks for the article…
    4. Geometry of Design for me then…)

    0
  4. 1104

    I already think in type, so i need:

    #3

    0
  5. 1105

    Stacey Garrison

    October 8th, 2008 8:29 am

    I really would like to brush up on my typography and book #3 really looks like a good read.
    #3

    0
  6. 1106

    Rusty Shaclkeford

    October 8th, 2008 8:29 am

    hey tanks for everything :)

    i want “letterhead and logo design” please

    good luck, ant thanks again.

    0
  7. 1107

    #9 – simply AMAZING

    0
  8. 1108

    Sniff, I gots no chance do I? #3

    0
  9. 1109

    i heart smashing

    my favorite is “Designing Web Navigation”

    0
  10. 1110

    SM is fantastic!

    Man what a tough choice:
    6

    0
  11. 1111

    sweet you guys rock

    #5

    0
  12. 1112

    I want the Geometry of Design: Studies in Proportion and Composition!

    0
  13. 1113

    Smashingly cool!
    10

    0
  14. 1114

    Pancakes.

    #1

    0
  15. 1115

    wow! number 3

    0
  16. 1116

    send me the 8th book, thanks :P

    0
  17. 1117

    Thanks, Smashing!

    Smash me with
    4

    0
  18. 1118

    Thanks for the giveaway! =)
    #7

    0
  19. 1119

    The book number 2 would make me the happiest girl in Universe..
    Thank You!

    0
  20. 1120

    Go SM go go go,

    #6

    0
  21. 1121

    Sweet #9

    0
  22. 1122

    typography FTW!
    3

    0
  23. 1123

    spectacular!
    5

    0
  24. 1124

    Thank you Smashing! #5

    0
  25. 1125

    I love this site, I love these books, I love number:
    9

    0
  26. 1126

    The only thing that would make this site better is knowing that book number 1 was on it’s way to yours truly.

    0
  27. 1127

    I’m a games programmer and demo coder who is interested in design and I love that this site is so full of inspiration. Book #10 looks perfect for someone like me :)

    Oh.. and thanks for the great site!

    0
  28. 1128

    Just Amazing
    9

    0
  29. 1129

    I would love book number 10 please

    0
  30. 1130

    Nestor Escobar

    October 8th, 2008 8:34 am

    Nice site! I follow it every day. Congrats!
    8. The CSS Anthology

    0
  31. 1131

    Please.
    9.

    0
  32. 1132

    Thanks #3

    0
  33. 1133

    This site is great, been reading it every week for about 6 months now :)

    I think my choice would be:
    4

    0
  34. 1134

    Evgeniy Filatov

    October 8th, 2008 8:35 am

    Would like to have #3 — “Thinking with Type” by Ellen Lupton.

    0
  35. 1135

    Oh wow, another of these cool giveaways!
    #1

    0
  36. 1136

    I’d prefer N° 8! Did you know that even in Austria we like Smashing Magazine?

    0
  37. 1137

    Thanks for the great site.
    #7

    0
  38. 1138

    6. Letterhead and Logo Design: v. 9

    I love the way that you stimulate the community by giving away free books once in a wile
    Good job.

    0
  39. 1139

    Fabolous! no other words can beat that!

    thats number #9 for me!

    0
  40. 1140

    Love 4, 6 and 7. Any of those will be nice to have. Good luck to all!
    10 will be nice to!

    Love smashing btw!

    0
  41. 1141

    # 3 for me

    0
  42. 1142

    awesome giveaway guys, as always. :D

    #6

    0
  43. 1143

    Fantastic site!
    #1

    0
  44. 1144

    This site has been a huge resource for me. Thanks!

    #8

    0
  45. 1145

    Thanks!
    7

    0
  46. 1146

    This is great! I love your blog, and those giveaways! Book number 3 is perfect for me ;-) Let the random generator do its work :D

    Seriously, I love this site!

    0
  47. 1147

    Curtis Steckel

    October 8th, 2008 8:37 am

    As a design Student I can say that both The Geometry of Design and Thinking with Type are excellent books! Win or loose, you guys should check them out! If I were to win I’d love to get my hands on Ajax: The Definitive Guide!

    1

    0
  48. 1148

    ILOVEYOURFACE.com
    3

    0
  49. 1149

    Love to see what you have posted every day! SM is Great!

    #4!

    0
  50. 1150

    Because the goldfish look so darn squishy: 9

    0
  51. 1151

    Briliant!
    6

    0
  52. 1152

    Hello,
    Book 8 would be great. I have an Internet Consulting business and love your site!
    Thanks,
    Will

    0
  53. 1153

    smashing magazine.is amazing place for getting inspiration to design a website

    5

    0
  54. 1154

    Book #6

    Great Site!

    0
  55. 1155

    Any of these books would be useful. I’m primarily a developer, so anything to sharpen my design skills would help. I would pick book #7 out of all of them though. All my navigation menus look the same.

    0
  56. 1156

    Awesome! free books :o)
    1

    0
  57. 1157

    Maarten Van Coile

    October 8th, 2008 8:39 am

    Amazing selection indeed! I’d love to have ‘m all, but if I have to choose:
    2. Pro JavaScript Techniques

    0
  58. 1158

    Thanks SM!

    #6

    0
  59. 1159

    Uau!
    i want #6, but i think it´s impossible to win. Impossible is something!
    Anyway, thanks Smashing!

    0
  60. 1160

    Book #3 please. Love the contests!

    0
  61. 1161

    nice
    9

    0
  62. 1162

    Your mag is good, reading is good, life is good!
    7

    0
  63. 1163

    Thank you SM :)
    8

    0
  64. 1164

    Book #7

    I always start the day by checking for new articles from Smashing Magazine. Keep up the excellent work!

    0
  65. 1165

    Thanks 8

    0
  66. 1166

    wow
    #6

    0
  67. 1167

    hey!
    7

    0
  68. 1168

    You are great and you give a great chance to get some amazing things and thoughts! Thank you!
    3

    0
  69. 1169

    Thanks for the giveaway ! Great books as usual.
    Here’s hoping to get number:
    7

    0
  70. 1170

    This is really nice – several truely neat books.
    #3 because type is the most important thing ever :)

    0
  71. 1171

    Crash, Bash, Smash, Slash then Dash before you get a Rash. :D

    #1

    0
  72. 1172

    Ajax!
    #1

    0
  73. 1173

    Thank you Smashing Mag!!
    1

    0
  74. 1174

    I recently discovered this site. It is very interesting.
    4

    0
  75. 1175

    #2 my friends

    0
  76. 1176

    Great site. I’ll take Book #3 please!

    0
  77. 1177

    Juliana Padron

    October 8th, 2008 8:44 am

    WoW! That´s the coolest thing I´ve ever found in a blog post… =)
    7

    0
  78. 1178

    Wow! Great giveaway. I love you all for this :-)
    Keep Smashin’

    3

    0
  79. 1179

    Great books. #6 =)

    0
  80. 1180

    Terry Humphries

    October 8th, 2008 8:45 am

    Nice
    4

    0
  81. 1181

    John Resig is my hero, so I’d llike
    2

    0
  82. 1182

    Smashing Magazine rocks! #10 please.

    0
  83. 1183

    I love looking at logos!
    6

    0
  84. 1184

    I love you!
    #4

    0
  85. 1185

    I love smashing!
    6

    0
  86. 1186

    In the mountains of truth you will never climb in vain: either you will get up higher today or you will exercise your strength so as to be able to get up higher tomorrow.

    #6

    0
  87. 1187

    #7 would be nice

    0
  88. 1188

    sweet!
    #6

    0
  89. 1189

    Marek Wojtaszek

    October 8th, 2008 8:47 am

    This one word makes me win this book. I hope so…
    6

    0
  90. 1190

    Free Ajax Resource? Yes, please!
    1

    0
  91. 1191

    i love the monthly desktop feature
    3

    0
  92. 1192

    3 has been on my list for a while, so might as well give it a shot! Looks good!

    0
  93. 1193

    Who wouldn’t want any of these books? I guess if I have top pick just one, it would be…

    #6

    0
  94. 1194

    The cover alone…: 6. Letterhead and Logo Design: v. 9 is my wish

    0
  95. 1195

    This is one kickass blog, now gimme a kickass book too!
    6

    0
  96. 1196

    Excellent giveaway, guys.

    Book 3.

    0
  97. 1197

    I don’t know to say beautiful words, that’s a paper artist work =(
    But my thankfully speech I’d like to give

    #5 my choice is.

    0
  98. 1198

    P.O.W.E.R. ]=)
    6

    0
  99. 1199

    3. Thinking with Type
    This is a must

    0
  100. 1200

    I’d love to get: Photoshop’s Most Powerful Feature.
    Because: We’re all about layers, onions, humans and photoshop. Learning about them might make me learn something about myself.

    0

↑ Back to top