Personally, when I design a site, I do a layout sketch on paper. Next I do all the graphics in photoshop, including backgrounds, buttons, button states, effects, lighting, etc. Then I load up flash, import all the graphics I did in photoshop to the flash library, then put it all together in flash for the main page. All the websites content is in the flash document aside from pics that I usually open in popup windows from links within the flash document as well as forums or guestbooks are usually also external to the flash. From here I use dreamweaver to build the 'placemat' html for the flash site. I also use dreamweaver for anything external to the flash document, like pics and such so I can place links back to main page, or a close popup button. I know there are a few problems with this method, such as compatability issues, but 99% of visitors do not experience any problems & its worth it for the interactivity that only flash can provide for the users. I figure, if its good enough method for most high profile websites like sony & ati, its good enough for me. Also its a faster method than spending hours trying to slice up graphics with imgrdy and firewrks or aligning tabling and framing with dreamweaver/frontpage. Dont get me wrong, slicing, framing, and tables all have their time & place, for example, I'll sometimes frame off navigation panels consisting of sliced images on my main page to house the flash content. Other times, I'll make an entire site from sliced images, depending on client needs. Many professional clients or intranet sites do not want the flashy bells & whistles, just a simple framed html basics. There is no single right way to do something that has to be custom tailored, every site is different, you cant limit yourself to a single method in this industry.
- S. Forbes
Steelton Progressive Web Design