The personal disquiet of

Mark Boulton

November 18th, 2005

Carson Workshops — CSS for Designers

Here I am, sat on a train, stuffed full of Sushi await­ing the train to finally pull away so I can start my long trip home (about four hours depend­ing on which signal’s decide to fail). After buy­ing my 12inch iBook in July, this is the first time I’ve used it in a truly mobile capa­city and so far it’s going well. Any­way, I’m not going to go about sushi, trains or laptops in this post. Today, I had the great pleas­ure of attend­ing the ‘CSS for Design­ers’ work­shop hos­ted by Car­son Work­shops in Lon­don. What a day it was.

I’ve sat here for a good ten minutes now think­ing where to start on describ­ing today, so I’ll just start at the beginning.

Car­son workshops

Car­son Work­shops is a UK based com­pany doing really great things. Ryan and Gillian’s com­bined tal­ents are man­aging to get the most tal­en­ted and inspir­a­tional speak­ers from around the world over to the UK, as well as events in the States, to give day long work­shops to the industry. 

Like a lot of web pro­fes­sion­als (do I fall within the bracket Andy? Molly? I’d like to think so :)), I try to attend as many con­fer­ences as I can in the web industry, such as @media, SXSW, unfor­tu­nately I couldn’t make it to dCon­struct, but I was there in spirit. These con­fer­ences are gen­er­ally very good. The wide vari­ety of speak­ers give informed present­a­tions on a pleth­ora of mater­ial. How­ever, these pan­els and present­a­tions rarely last more than an hour, and from my exper­i­ence, there’s only so much you can gain from them. Work­shops, such as the one atten­ded today, are a very dif­fer­ent beast all together.

The Work­shop

Today’s work­shop — CSS for Design­ers — had Molly Holz­sch­lag and and our very own Andy Clarke at the helm. 

I’ve met Andy before in per­son, very briefly, at @media in Lon­don in June and found his present­a­tion very inspir­a­tional from a designer’s per­spect­ive. Andy talks the same lan­guage as me. Japan­ese. No, ser­i­ously, Andy’s design tal­ents are but the tip of a Web Stand­ards trifle. I mean, Ice­burg. The guy just really, really knows his stuff. Not only all the cre­at­ive design stuff, but also how to imple­ment it using web stand­ards. The most import­ant thing, how­ever, is Andy can explain this stuff in a lan­guage design­ers can under­stand. No mean feat. The same can be said about his co-presenter, Molly.

It was great to finally meet Molly. If there’s one per­son in the web industry who embod­ies the pas­sion that first got me inter­ested in this medium, then that’s Molly. The thing that got me about Molly, as she was present­ing through­out the day, was the incred­ible depth of her know­ledge. Like Andy, she really, really knows her stuff but in a slightly dif­fer­ent way, from a dif­fer­ent back­ground. The two of them work­ing together through­out a whole day worked very well indeed. A great double act. Not quite More­combe and Wise though, more like Can­non and Ball :) 

Ok, that’s enough back-slapping (the troll’s will be queueing up oth­er­wise). What I’m get­ting at is, if you get the change to go to a work­shop like this or listen to either of these guys speak, then do it.

As I was say­ing earlier, a work­shop format is very dif­fer­ent from a con­fer­ence. In a con­fer­ence format you only get a snap­shot of the presenter’s work, on a sub­ject they choose, in a format and struc­ture which may not be totally up to them. How much can you really gain from this format in prac­tical terms? Yes, they’re great for inspir­a­tion, for steer­ing you in the right dir­ec­tion, but gen­er­ally they lack spe­cific detail and the oppor­tun­ity to ask very spe­cific ques­tions in the con­text of a pro­ject you may be work­ing on. The work­shop format changes all of this.

This was a full day work­shop, from 9am until 6pm with reas­on­able breaks for lunch and cof­fee. So, it was a long day to sit in front of a pro­jector and listen to two people talk about the same sub­ject. Or so you may think. In real­ity, it wasn’t like this at all. With some nicely designed slides, a user-friendly agenda (mean­ing it wasn’t all design in the morn­ing and the­ory in the after­noon) and reg­u­lar swap­ping over by Molly and Andy it made the day go really quickly.

When I first arrived, Molly and Andy both expressed a con­cern to me that I’d know a lot of stuff that they’d go through through­out the day. This was not the case at all. Regard­less of your exper­i­ence level, you should con­sider attend­ing one of this work­shops. I learnt tons of stuff that I’d either skimmed over, couldn’t be bothered learn­ing fully, or got by by other means. One of these examples was Molly’s examples of Rel­at­ive and Abso­lute pos­i­tion­ing. I’d sort of under­stood them for a while, but never used them because I’d always used floats. Dur­ing the present­a­tion a little light bulb went on in my head. ‘Hello there’, I said, ‘Now I get it. This looks really cool!’. In fact, that happened quite a few times through­out the day. 

The per­sonal high­light for me was when Andy was present­ing a sec­tion and grid design and a slide of my site appeared. Well, if he hadn’t of for­warned me, you could’ve knocked me down with a feather. He even made me stand up, which was nice. I like to think I took this five minutes of fame in my stride to a rather bemused audi­ence who, not sur­pris­ingly, had never heard of me.

A fun day had by all

If there’s one thing to be said about today’s work­shop is that it was enlight­en­ing, both in terms of day’s present­a­tions, but also in the pub after­wards (which is where most of the really use­ful stuff is nor­mall dis­cussed). Thank you to Ryan and Gil­lian for host­ing a fant­astic day. It was great to meet some new people, finally meet Molly and have more than five minutes to talk with Andy. Inter­est­ing to note how many people from the BBC were there also. Are we to expect big CSS things from the BBC design­ers in the future? Well, just maybe.

Well, that’s killed an hour. Right I’m off to the buf­fet car. Stella anyone?

18 Responses to “Carson Workshops — CSS for Designers”

  1. Rob Lewis said on: November 19th, 2005 at 11:42 am

    Ah, there’s noth­ing like drink­ing a Brit­ish Rail Stella at ?4 a can is there?!

  2. simon jones said on: November 21st, 2005 at 6:46 pm

    Good review Mark, I agree the work­shop was excel­lent. Made such a dif­fer­ence to have stuff explained in such an enga­ging way. I didn’t get a chance to say hi, I was sat down drink­ing too much beer I fear.

  3. Thomas said on: November 21st, 2005 at 9:27 pm

    Glad to hear you enjoyed your time at the work­shop in Lon­don.  I was for­tu­nate to attend the Car­son work­shop in Chicago, with Eric Meyer, and had a great time there (and talk with Eric at lunch).

    One of the great items we covered, dur­ing the last third of the work­shop, was Alex Robinson’s In Search of the One True Lay­out. It was great to fol­low along as Eric worked through the solu­tion … No mat­ter the skill level, every­one was glued to what was going on.

    Look­ing for­ward the Carson’s return trip to Chicago.

  4. Marc Jones said on: November 22nd, 2005 at 12:09 pm

    I atten­ded the Thursday and had to swerve the soiree after­wards. Ah. Thursday/Friday. I see what happened ;-) 

    I’d like to endorse the “light­bulb” moments although for me it was for more than one ele­ment. Des­pite devour­ing many books I was still dream­ing in tables. 

    Not any more. Sud­denly the books make sense, I “get it”.

    I have seen the light. 

    My only bleat is that the Thursday course ran out of time leav­ing me feel­ing a little short-changed — although I need to fin­ish by say­ing that what was covered was truly illu­min­at­ing and most worthy.

  5. Anthony Wilson said on: November 23rd, 2005 at 11:21 am

    I too was at the Thursday work­shop and like Marc, my only cri­ti­cism was the ‘run­ning out of time’ factor. But maybe that was only because eveyth­ing else about the day was so great?! 

    So, I emailed Gil­lian earlier this week, express­ing my desire to aquire a copy of the slides to see if there was any other great stuff I could glean from them. 

    Gil­lians response was that she would speak to Andy and Molly to find out which info she could release and would then get back to me. 

    I’m guess­ing, once she has everything agreed, she will email us all cop­ies or post them some­where for us to download.

  6. Marc Jones said on: November 23rd, 2005 at 11:41 am

    Hope­fully the slides will make sense on their own! Appre­ci­ate the offer but can’t help think­ing a small dis­count for a future course wouldn’t be slightly more appropriate. 

    I’m hat­ing sound­ing like a bread-head com­plain­ant here as what we did get was superb. 

    Pos­sibly a case of being a beta tester on the Rev A day I guess ;-)

    I sin­cerely hope some­thing sim­ilar is set up some­time, I’m amazed how much I learnt — it was per­fectly pitched and a treat to know the speak­ers were at the top of their game. 

    Next time I’ll be less Brit­ish and stuffy and make sure I trip along to the boozer.

  7. Mark Boulton said on: November 23rd, 2005 at 11:57 am

    In Andy and Molly’s defence, it was the first time they’d presen­ted those slides I think on the the Thursday. I guess I was lucky attend­ing on the Fri­day when they’d had an oppor­tun­ity to give them a run through.

  8. Marc Jones said on: November 23rd, 2005 at 12:16 pm

    Sure, com­pletely under­stood and hope I don’t sound like I am here on a mission.

    I guess self-employment and pay­ing myself made me a bit more jumpy than some who’d been handed a day out the office and been paid to go ;-) 

    I’ve no doubt I enjoyed awe­some value by the way, I’d prefer my stance to be seen as “what I got was so help­ful I’m gut­ted I might have enjoyed being handed fur­ther knowledge”.

  9. Marc Jones said on: November 23rd, 2005 at 1:08 pm

    Any­one else here attend­ing http://www.carsonworkshops.com/design-dev/shea/19JAN2006.html ? Looks spot on content-wise. My only prob­lem is find­ing the De Niros in time :-/

  10. Anthony Wilson said on: November 23rd, 2005 at 1:38 pm

    ?what I got was so help­ful I?m gut­ted I might have enjoyed being handed fur­ther know­ledge? — I think this sums it up perfectly. 

    It’s only because the stuff we did get was so per­fect in pitch and qual­ity that it makes you feel like you’ve really missed out on something.

    Had the work­shop not been as good as it was, we’d prob­ably have just been happy to get out of there after seven hours star­ing at a pro­jec­tion screen. 

    Hope I’m explain­ing myself prop­erly here. 

    This is by no means a dig at Andy or Molly as I fully appre­ci­ate that present­ing these slides to a live audi­ence for the first time would be com­pletely dif­fer­ent to run­ning through them in preper­a­tion. You can never fully anti­cip­ate which parts of the present­a­tion will pro­voke a response, or how time con­sum­ing that response may be.

  11. Marc Jones said on: November 23rd, 2005 at 1:57 pm

    It was about 1/5th of the total con­tent that was missed. Rather than being des­per­ate to get out — had it been not-great (as it was) I’d have been look­ing for some fin­an­cial recompense! 

    I’m repeat­ing myself and almost cer­tainly over­do­ing the posts per­cent­age so I’ll sign off by endors­ing accept­ance of the clock beat­ing the presenters on purely hon­our­able grounds!

  12. Molly E. Holzschlag said on: December 4th, 2005 at 12:06 pm

    The simple truth is we could never get through everything in one day. Don’t you agree? 

    There is so much to talk about! And yes, there’s no ques­tion that the first day did not have the tim­ing the second day did. We def­in­itely paced the Fri­day bet­ter, based on audi­ence response.  How­ever, the Thursday people got details that Friday’s chil­dren didn’t get. 

    I think a one day work­shop is a harsh task. I think two days is bet­ter for a work­shop model. It’s not as exhaust­ing as a con­fer­ence but allows room for dis­cus­sion and detail as well as the net­work­ing benefits. 

    The feed­back is essen­tial. I always appre­ci­ate con­struct­ive cri­ti­cism and I’m always glad to learn some­thing new.  So thanks. 

    M

  13. Mark Boulton said on: December 4th, 2005 at 12:15 pm

    I abso­lutely agree Molly. The amount you and Andy got through on the day was pretty astound­ing. To cover that much mater­ial in an even-paced work­shop envir­on­ment is a credit to you both. 

    True, I was on the second day when you had gone through the mater­ial the day before. I guess the more you go through it, the bet­ter it will get.

  14. Marc Jones said on: December 5th, 2005 at 11:01 am

    Molly,

    Yes, it was a hard task to squeeze in the advert­ised con­tent into one day. 

    Not cri­ti­cising what was dis­cussed, more over I was com­ment­ing that the advert­ised sched­uled sem­inar that pay­ing attendees have come along to take part in covered 4/5ths of what was advert­ised as the content.

    I sug­gest “top­ics from” next time out if there is too much to cover. 

    Again, no com­plaints at all about what was covered — but if you ordered a book from amazon that was a great read but had 20 out of 100 pages… ;-) 

    Two days would have been per­fect for so much con­tent and the massively help­ful interaction. 

    Again, really not after seem­ing it was a major com­plaint — more a case of want­ing more of the good stuff that was actu­ally advert­ised (and that’s cer­tainly not Molly and Andy’s fault!).

  15. Molly E. Holzschlag said on: December 5th, 2005 at 11:24 am

    Marc,

    Actu­ally I think it was in part our fault. Set­ting expect­a­tions is import­ant, as is meet­ing them. So, if that’s the out­line we provided, that’s what we really were striv­ing to deliver. 

    It takes fin­esse, it’s not easy, and yeah, I ulti­mately agree: Shorten the list of top­ics, and try for two days in the future ;-)

  16. Ben Armstrong said on: January 5th, 2006 at 10:51 am

    Pho­tos of the event — here

  17. Marc Jones said on: January 5th, 2006 at 3:41 pm

    Indeed. There’s me beneath Molly (insert your own punch­line here).

  18. Molly E. Holzschlag said on: January 5th, 2006 at 4:07 pm

    Marc! I wish I had a punch­line.  You did make me laugh though ;-) 

    Every­one here read about @media2006? Start sav­ing those pretty pounds my love­lies, it’s going to be a great time. The list of speak­ers is won­der­ful, http://www.vivabit.com/atmedia2006/

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