Favorite Museums that Use Drupal as their CMS
Working for a Drupal shop has made me aware of the many different websites that are created on the Drupal Content Management System. As a museum aficionado, today I thought I would showcase a few of my favorite museums who happen to be running their websites on Drupal.
On a previous post, I blogged about Branding & Style Guides, notice on the screen shots of these particular websites how they stick to a color palette, typography, and even some go as far as matching their logo to their websites color palette.
LOUVRE MUSEUM
The world's most visited and famous museum The Louvre incorporates their famous Pyramid in the background of their website. Their logo also has shades of black, grey, and white, which runs throughout the website.
THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has one of the most unique home page with a mosaic-type parallax displaying their newest art exhibits. Again, the logo's simplicity is reflected into the the menu as well as the font.
MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston's logo contain red and also uses them as their menu colors and links.
KIMBELL ART MUSEUM
The Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, which LevelTen had the pleasure of building, follows the same rule as the other three museums. Kimbell utilizes it's two-tones color logo and uses it consistently throughout the site.
What websites do you think are the best when it comes to one that was built on Drupal? Does your website use a consistent theme when it comes to color scheme and branding? In other words a style guide? Open Enterprise gives you a pre-designed style guide for your website. It will keep the same theme throughout the website as well as making all the buttons, boxes, etc match the color scheme and typography.
Want to learn more about style guides and about what Open Enterprise can do to help you build a better website? Let us help you focus on your content and worry less about building a website. Which are your favorite build Drupal sites? Leave your comments below!