Description: Classic pie with apple cinnamon filling and a buttery crust.
Source: AllRecipes
This website makes the recipe easy to read by giving it enough space on the page, while also condensing the text so your eyes don't have to travel far. The recipe section is two columns: ingredients on the left and instructions on the right. This allows me to easily look between the ingredients and the instructions, which is very helpful while in the process of cooking. It also cleary distinguishes the different steps and separates the header from the instructions.
This site keeps all the recipe text to the left side, while showing a video on the right. This site ackowledges that having text spread across the entire screen is a bit too far and keeping it towards one side allows the user to read it quicker.
I actually find this recipe is very hard to read because the space given to the article on the page is very small. However, I picked it for one feature I wanted to highlight. On the recipe card, the user is able to click 1x, 2x or 3x and the measurement of each ingredient changes to double or triple, which I found useful.
This portfolio for a video game programming professor at WashU demonstrates good design choices because of the menu on the left and the main content on the right. The menu is easy to navigate and the content has enough space but not too much. The image gallery works well and the resume section is able to compact a lot of information in a readable format.
This site for the artist Olivia Rodrigo is professional and usable, while maintaining pops of personality and creativity. It looks as if there are stickers plastered around the site, like in a diary or journal. The site maintains Olivia's brand well and I hope to add similar pops of fun to my websites.
I picked W3Schools because of the "try it yourself" feature on their articles. This feature allows users to test out code that the articles explain to readers. I think this is a great example of understanding the goals of users and what features can help them.