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No Images? Click here Learn the art of paper prototypingPaper prototyping is the act of making prototypes out of paper-based material. It might be paper, card, cardboard, notebooks, sticky notes, or other forms of the medium–anything you can cut, fold, draw on, and adapt to become a prototype that once may have been a tree. In his book Designing Interactions, Bill Moggridge advised “Prototype early and often.” Using paper offers you a great opportunity to prototype early in the design process. It’s also rapid enough to enable you to do it frequently. Paper prototypes: enable you to test ideas quicklyare cheap and don't require specialized trainingare particularly suited for collaborationcreate a shared understandinghave no technical constraintsPaper prototypes can range from simple collages to test out layout ideas: To complete device simulations: Designing UX: PrototypingIn this chapter of Design UX: Prototyping you'll learn all about paper prototyping. We'll cover what it entails, and its pros and cons. We'll cover what's required for paper prototyping, and present different examples on how to create and use paper prototypes in your design process. Learn Paper Prototyping NowStart your subscription today and you'll get access to this book, plus 300+ other web design and development books in SitePoint Premium! Until next time, P.S. Hungry for more UX techniques? Check out Designing UX: Forms! SitePoint48 Cambridge Street Collingwood, VIC 3066 | Australia You're receiving this email because you signed up to receive news from SitePoint. Smart choice! Like Tweet Share Forward Preferences | Unsubscribe |
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