Based in North Wales, Stuff and Nonsense is a small, but popular, web design studio, founded and led by designer and author Andy Clarke. We started back in 1998 and have built an enviable reputation for designing highly effective web sites, ecommerce stores and web applications for our clients.
We create web sites that are visually engaging, use technologies appropriately, have high levels of accessibility and that satisfy the needs of the people that use them. We focus on making simple, useable and attractive web sites using web standards technologies including XHTML and CSS; heck, we even wrote a book about it, Transcending CSS: The Fine Art of Web Design.
So why do our clients love us, and why do they keep coming back? We think it's because we are so passionate about our work. We love designing for the web. With every job we do, we try to learn something new about how to do things better.
Andy Clarke is hip and mature. You almost never get both. He is a seasoned brand steward, a fancy pixel wrangler, and no mean hand at code. A triple talent. The bastard.
Jeffrey Zeldman, Happy Cog | Testimonials
It is because of this passion and our attention to the finest details, that we have attracted some big names to our small studio in North Wales. We also regularly promote creative, accessible, standards-based design in our writing, at conference, training and workshop events as well as in our everyday work.
Win a copy of Inspired Design (DVD) and Transcending CSS
I am really, really pleased that places on our Visual Web Design Master Class are selling fast. Book your place before 10th October 2008 and you could win a copy of Inspired Design (DVD) and Transcending CSS (book), together worth £68.00. (More at For A Beautiful Web.
More | October 1st 2008
Five CSS design browser differences I can live with
Web designs need not look exactly the same in all browsers. I know that's a topic I have written about and spoken on a fair amount before, but somehow I'm always amazed by the reactions that I get when the subject comes up. (Comments are open at For A Beautiful Web)
More | September 24th 2008
