Design Tips & Tricks #874
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Thanks for sharing! |
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Thanks for sharing this cassie! |
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Wow great 👍 thanks for sharing 🤓 |
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Awesome! thanks for sharing😄 |
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Really learned a lot, especially the articles' are very informational. Thanks for sharing this. 🔥 |
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Some tools and websites I've come across: Colors/ColoursFontsIcons
MockupsOther useful links |
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Hello folks!
For non-designers, it's a bit scary to start with designing a product. This product can be anything, for example, a logo, website, app or, anything that comes with a design. As a designer myself, I would love to share the things that I've learned so far. These include color/colour, white-space, and many more.
Table of contents
Color/Colour
Everyone knows that a first impression counts. This is especially true when it comes to your brand since your brand color/colour is most likely the first thing customers see. Colors/Colours evoke emotions and feelings, they also hold certain information. This enables customers to form a first impression without even knowing what your product is about.
In short, your brand colors/colours are powerful in helping customers decide whether or not they want to engage.
What color/colour is associated with what emotion or feeling?
Color/colour psychology in-depth:
UI design and colors/colours:
Whitespace
In general most non-designers and beginning designers are afraid of whitespace. Thinking everything needs to contain something. However, this often comes across as clumsy and too busy. Take a look at the example below.
Which one is more readable? The left one, isn't it? Why is that, you think? Correct answer! Whitespace of course.
With a very little amount of effort, the design already looks a lot better.
What about images and objects? Well, let's take a look at that as well.
On the left image, our eyes keep jumping from object to object. Not knowing what to focus on. If we would implement whitespace as seen on the right image. It gives us a pattern to look at brand name, title, text, button, bubble. This result is more soothing and pleasing to our eyes.
Importance of whitespace in-depth:
Typeface
Most common typefaces:
Serif: Typefaces with feet like those are called serif. You can see where the "feets" are highlighted below:
Sans-serif: In French, the word “sans” means “without.” So the term “sans serif” literally means “without serif.” In the image below, you’ll notice the words lack serifs, as pointed out with the red arrows.
There are also a few typefaces and fonts overused, so designers nowadays never use them. Here is a list of them:
Source: https://www.logomaker.com/blog/2019/09/17/10-overused-fonts/
Typefaces in-depth:
Key elements in a design are:
I do not own any of these images and/or websites. They were used to show a few tips and or tricks and are coming from the sites used.
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