Visual guides

The original .com visual ideas are now part of the finished site.

These six guide pages carry the older .com feeling. Each one now has a clean place, clearer English text, larger image viewing, and easy routes back to the rest of the site.

Open archiveHome
Guide

Start Visual

You see a dark poster with one bright circle in the middle and smaller details around it. The design pulls your eye inward first, then outward. It feels like a beginning, a first stop, or a clear entry point.

Open page
Guide

Home Visual

You see a blue-toned image with a central globe-like shape. The colours feel steady and familiar. The page looks calmer and more grounded than a bright, busy visual.

Open page
Guide

Quiet Visual

You see a darker and softer image with less visual pressure. It feels slower, quieter, and more reflective. The card is not trying to rush the visitor.

Open page
Guide

Action Visual

You see warmer reds and oranges, stronger contrast, and more visual energy. This card feels more active, more forward-looking, and more practical.

Open page
Guide

Strength Visual

You see a larger central object with a strong sense of scale. The image feels weighty, serious, and stable. It suggests presence and protection.

Open page
Guide

Guiding Visual

You see a bright golden image with a very strong centre. The visual is warm, clear, and impossible to miss. It naturally acts like a guide or signal.

Open page

Why keep the guides

The older visual language still adds meaning

These pages are not just leftovers. They explain mood, pace, direction, calm, and action. That is useful because the site is not only about space facts. It is also about how a visual page feels and what it asks the visitor to do next.

Better than before

Now the guides are easier to use live

Open a guide, view the image larger, start a loop, read the explanation aloud, and return Home. That is a big improvement over a loose image or a raw poster file.

More written explanation

Why the original visual foundation still belongs here

The older visual foundation is important because it shows where the .com idea came from. These pages carry the first mood, the first shapes, and the first feeling of the project. Keeping them visible gives the site identity instead of making it feel like a brand-new replacement.

The added text makes these pages easier to understand. Instead of only seeing a poster, the visitor now gets help reading the composition, the feeling, and the role each visual guide can play inside the wider site.

That gives the section a stronger place in the main site. It is no longer only archive material. It becomes a living part of the project with its own explanation and route back into the newer pages.

  • Open the original visual pages when you want to see the first .com direction.
  • Use the larger image view to keep the poster visible without losing Home.
  • Read the explanation blocks to understand mood, movement, and focus.
  • Move from these pages into planets, stars, or the archive when you want more detail.

Why this page helps

Why earlier content still helps the site

Older material can give a site character when it is placed well and explained clearly. That is exactly what this section now does.

It widens the site, adds more pages, and preserves your original input instead of hiding it.

Why this matters: every page pairs images with explanation so visitors always know what they are seeing and where they can go next.