I am trying to create sign ui for app and brand color is pink , i want to know , the colors of components like texts , button color and other components is coloured perfectly according to brand color or where should i keep brown and where pink for components and also feedback about ui would be valuable, thank you
Been working in UI/UX since 2012, and lately I’ve felt the need to put everything into a book. Not just another generic guide, but something structured and real—focused on the User, UX, and UI as three connected but distinct pillars.
The plan is to include practical insights, real examples, and maybe even interviews with designers building cool stuff—not just theory.
What I’d love to know:
• What would you want to see in a book like this?
• What’s missing from most design content out there?
• Any names you admire that I should try to reach out to for input or interviews?
Appreciate any ideas, suggestions, or links. Want to make something useful—not just write it for the sake of it.
Are designers typically making these types of device mockups from scratch? Specially referring to the offset/skewed orientation and thicker, 3D-ish appearance.
Lately, I’ve been scrolling through godly.website and list.swajp.me , and the websites listed there are seriously impressive.
I’ve been trying to find open-source alternatives or websites from those lists that are open source. I’ve checked at least a hundred sites but haven’t had any luck. I also searched the web for something similar to Godly - a list of awesome open-source websites - but again, did not find one.
So, my questions are:
Does anyone know of a website or an "awesome list" that focuses on open-source websites like the ones on Godly?
Has anyone found open-source websites from Godly or Swajp’s list? If so, could you share them?
Or, if you know of any open-source websites that are similar in quality/style, please drop them below!
Any help would be super appreciated
Sorry if it's the wrong sub, I just could not post to webdev / web_design due to me not having enough karma.
I’m a product designer, and we’ve been working on something for a few months now. The goal is to make it easier to get feedback from people you actually respect and look up to. I’ve noticed that getting quick, actionable insights on design work is often harder than it should be.
We’re focusing on micro-feedback - short, practical tips that make a difference without taking too much time. Sometimes just a quick note on a UI element or a brief comment on a layout can change your whole approach.
How do you usually get feedback on your designs? Do you post here, ask colleagues, or reach out directly to designers you admire? I’d love to know what works for you!
I have designed many different types of pages on figma already and I was wondering do I have to learn html, css and java now or can you get other people to do that for you?
Hi everyone, I'm a student in graphic design and have to write an essay/litterature review about UI design and AI.
I'm reading about it at the moment, but struggle to find an angle to write the review about ... beyond the "AI potentially taking over the creative process in UI design" (just an example) as there may be more than that?
As I'm not in this field (nor student nor a UI designer), I would like to have your opinion on it.
If you have any suggestion about , please let me know, thanks a mil !
Hello everyone! I've found this beautiful website for a Hackathon on Twitter and it made question: how to create these kind of 3D models that a user can interact with (using a mouse, button, etc.). Is this kind of 3D models made from scratch? How to animate these models?
Alright, Figma fans—FigPals were the best (and weirdest) thing to come out of April Fools’ this year. They follow your cursor, help you design, and love you unconditionally… maybe too much. 👀
But here’s the problem—they’re only available for April Fun Week! 😭
We can’t let this be just a one-time joke. FigPals deserve to be a permanent feature (with a toggle for those who don’t want constant companionship). That’s why I made a Change.orgpetition to show Figma how much we want to keep them!
Hello! I was going through my old work and I realised that one of the biggest gaps in my UI skills is understanding of typography (fonts, playing with sizes and weights, hierarchy).
What are some good resources to learn typography and fonts for UI?
I have designed a design for a dating app. I have delivered the many of the UI pages but some are missing as the client is also not sure of what to include and what not to so those parts are on hold. Now the client is asking me how much will you charge for the page you have made. As this is my very first time doing a freelance like this I am not sure how much to charge. Can anyone help me with this? The client is saying me he will pay per number of pages designed.
I'm doing copywork but I'm not sure how to recreate this tab bar with a border that outlines this oversized plus icon. What I did was just to trace an outline of the original, and I'm wondering if there are other ways to go about doing this?
I am having trouble with learning figma autolayout since the videos on youtube are 2-3 years old and I have a completely different version of figma as compared to those on youtube. I couldn't find some features on my version.
I'm working on a cake shop site and need to ask someone! When users pick a cake size/flavour, the price goes up (like +$20 for M, +$40 for L). Should I show the extra cost next to each size or just update the total price live? Or maybe do it like Apple’s product options ( -$20 for S, +$40 for L?). But then it doesn't make sence for flavours, as there are 10 basic and 2 premium ones, and choosing premium will add -20usd to almost all others. What’s the best UX? Probably I overthink but anyway🫠
I keep seeing different answers to what the size should be for an app's frame. Many times, I see people say that it varies and that it's different for every iPhone. However, is there a one-size-fits-all dimension? If I cater to an iPhone 14 size, will it look the same for an iPhone 16?
Hello! I'm about to finish my first year in college and decided to switch from a medical major to Communication Technology (a few classes for writing, mass media, etc. & web design classes). My goal is to get into UI Design.
I understand that UI Design is typically associated with a Graphic Design degree, but the college I'm enrolled in doesn't offer a minor in Graphic Design. They do offer minors in Art History, Photography, Commercial Film Production, Glass, Museum Studies, and Printmaking.
I was advised to look into minoring in Information Systems, which my advisor explained would teach me more 'back-end' stuff + business stuff since it's in our College of Business.
I think it's important to note that art is my passion, and I spent most of my time in highschool creating two portfolios for two AP art classes. I'm fairly confident in my ability to self-teach graphic design on my own. I am completely unfamiliar with code.
TLDR; With all of that in mind, should I minor in one of the Art Minors or minor in Information Systems?
Hi There, I'm a software developer, who wants to build some apps and release on app store. Right now i've no understanding on UI/UX design. What is the bare minimum concept that I should learn so that my UI looks decent. Thanks.
So I wanted to freelance and build websites for small business around my area and my country in general, so they can digitalize their products or services so they can expand. If I were to build them a website and delivered it to them, how would it be maintained?
My idea is that I can offer them to maintain it, like look for a domain, manage the SEO and generally maintain their website up and running, and charging them a bit extra for that. Or, they could do it themselves and maybe save a little bit.
What's your guys take on it? What would you do in this situation? Anything would help, thank you!
Hey everyone, I’m working on a mobile app and struggling to pick the right color scheme. The app is an educational social media platform for students (7th–12th grade), and I want it to be engaging yet easy on the eyes. I'm leaning towards minimalistic design approach but still open to suggestions.
What color combinations do you think would work best? Any insights would be really helpful!
So I’m a junior designer, I have about 2 years of working experience in UI design but a degree in UX design. I’m currently working at a startup with about 15 employees where 2 of us are designers. The other designer was hired a few months before me and was introduced as ”lead designer”.
After a couple of months this lead designer basically stopped doing anything with the constant excuse of conceptualizing but never actually producing anything that could be used for the product and this has been going on now for like a year.
Everyone (even our bosses) is aware of the fact that this lead designer isn’t doing anything and that I alone have the workload of designing the whole product, a responsive web app. Their solution has been to tell me that they’ll lessen my workload by prioritizing tasks but in practice nothing has changed.
I’m torn because on one hand I’m very proud of the work I’m doing and having so much confidence put in me to have responsibility over the product, especially when having so little experience. But on the other hand I’m very self conscious about my lack of experience and worried about my professional growth in the field of UI/UX design. I really feel like I’m missing out when not having a senior designer to bounce ideas off and learn from.
I guess what I want to know is, from other people who have had a similar experience, or seniors who have worked with juniors who previously worked without ”guidance”, how does this affect one’s future? Pros and cons? Should I try to find a place where I can learn from others instead of pushing on alone?
I have to redesign a family friend's website, they asked me for it and i said yes. i am rookie in ui ux. How do you actually redesign it for a client, (for context its a ecommerce site) so i have to make each and every product page in figma?, like what extent do i need to redesign it ? (sorry for my english) (i am proficient in figma but its my first project)
At work, I'm currently in the midst of designing a UI that, among other things, includes a list of products. This list can be sorted based on a bunch of variables like name, price etc.
However, this list will also includes offers of the same product on different platforms. Not the same physical entity, but the same product type/variation (for instance, a tube of Colgate Extra Mint Toothpaste) sold on, let's say, Amazon and Ebay.
Because these list items are so closely related, I'd like to represent that relation visually, by always having these items grouped together, with something indicating their relation. The list will consist of 1-line cards. My first idea was to connect items like this:
Related items (Lorem Ipsum A and B)
I'd love to see/read your take on this!
Edit: I have a bunch of other ideas already lined up, but I thought it might be interesting to see how other designers would approach this; where do you look for the 'stretch' in definitions of a 'card', 'list item', 'group' etc., what are visually effective ways to communicate relations in this context, etc.
I know I'm not giving too much information about context, styleguide rules etc, but that's because I'm curious about the design thinking with an issue like this, not so much the actual design that it leads to.