I made a discord server for us where I can share UX/UI tips, potential job connections, frontend knowledge and talk to all you guys! I’d love to get to know all of you and become friends :) discord.gg/psNSvK4zsk
sometimes logos having to adapt to system-wide styles, like android rendering a certain shape aroud each app-icon, which is different for many phones. Also there is this thing, where in the taskbar/toolbar every logo is shown black & white only and colored logos just look crappy. then some use dark mode, some use brigt mode. nobody wants icons to annoyingly stand out from the system/os desing choices. making them simpler makes it easier for the OS to put a filter on them to make them monochrome or something.
The video already explain it in terms of UI and UX design. What I don't understand why did she gave Pringles, Smucker's as some of the examples of simple logo design? I'm pretty sure Pringles don't do any business around making apps or building high traffic website.
I wonder what will be the triggering event or brand that will swing the pendulum back the other way. It is a fashion trend, after all, so eventually someone will go for visual maximalism and make a splash, and the cycle will repeat.
ok, I'm an old lady with fumble-y fingers, but what I would LOVE for both website design & apps is a BACK BUTTON. Happens to me a lot, clicking by accident which takes me into a new world of surprises (not the fun kind). ..just saying. Really enjoying your videos Thx!
Everyone is trying to be a tech company. Spotify, Netflix, Google, and Apple make sense that they want to have a simple logo. You interacted with their product primarily on screen with various size, resolution, aspect ratio, etc. I also think the minimalist logo is an extension of the minimalist UI and makes the entire brand more consistent. Imagine if the Netflix logo had a red metallic texture but the UI only used flat red. Pringles, on the other hand, is a food product. You see them in grocery stores, not on screens. They're the ones who decide how big or small the logo wants to be. Also car companies, they're selling physical products. The material and built quality is one of the consideration to buy said product. So when car companies start removing their shine, glow, edges, shadow, texture, from their logo they're losing their tangible feeling. Instead they just flatten their logo.
I made a discord server for us where I can share UX/UI tips, potential job connections, frontend knowledge and talk to all you guys! I’d love to get to know all of you and become friends :)
discord.gg/psNSvK4zsk
its sad to se minimalism everywhere. most of the companies now look all the same
Minimalism is great, but... too minimal and it becomes just shapes and no identity
@ agree
sometimes logos having to adapt to system-wide styles, like android rendering a certain shape aroud each app-icon, which is different for many phones. Also there is this thing, where in the taskbar/toolbar every logo is shown black & white only and colored logos just look crappy. then some use dark mode, some use brigt mode.
nobody wants icons to annoyingly stand out from the system/os desing choices. making them simpler makes it easier for the OS to put a filter on them to make them monochrome or something.
The video already explain it in terms of UI and UX design. What I don't understand why did she gave Pringles, Smucker's as some of the examples of simple logo design? I'm pretty sure Pringles don't do any business around making apps or building high traffic website.
I wonder what will be the triggering event or brand that will swing the pendulum back the other way. It is a fashion trend, after all, so eventually someone will go for visual maximalism and make a splash, and the cycle will repeat.
1:10 windows?? 👀 it’s literally 4 solid colour squares
0:57 am I the only one who was focused on the pizza logo and NOT the square?
It’d be nice if they made the simple shapes for high contrast then the details with low contrast shade differences
smuckers? like that one song?
0:05 , IT LOOKS HORRENDOUS. (was 2 minutes ago here woohoo :o)
They're not even a tech company
All companies outside of tech alsl even do it
What’s the different between UX and and UI?
UX is making the product easy to understand and use, it reduces friction between the user and the product. UI is the looks/aesthetics
user experience (ux)
user interface (ui)
poor ui leads to poor ux
1:10 we have that in France: Orange, the biggest national telephony operator
Re: Design 10k subs before the end of the year let's make it happen!!
Fingers crossed!
I really enjoyed this video! Interesting content, great presentation (visually and audibly).
luv your vids
thanks!
ok, I'm an old lady with fumble-y fingers, but what I would LOVE for both website design & apps is a BACK BUTTON. Happens to me a lot, clicking by accident which takes me into a new world of surprises (not the fun kind). ..just saying. Really enjoying your videos Thx!
Firefox should watch this.
How firefox is involved into this?
It'd be amazing to join discord to connect with other designers too :)
forgot to put the invite link, it's pinned now!
@@redesignuxui Thanks a lot! :)
what is the background song?
2:13 not all angry
Patreon. Letter P > Ping pong > The B. L. O. B.
Good videos but without music, it would feel better to listen and pay attention properly
3:58 where’s the link?
1st! YEAAHH
Im not angry about it 0:15
cool
Angry or not, it still sucks, we tend to not like to change
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9th comment
Everyone is trying to be a tech company.
Spotify, Netflix, Google, and Apple make sense that they want to have a simple logo. You interacted with their product primarily on screen with various size, resolution, aspect ratio, etc. I also think the minimalist logo is an extension of the minimalist UI and makes the entire brand more consistent. Imagine if the Netflix logo had a red metallic texture but the UI only used flat red.
Pringles, on the other hand, is a food product. You see them in grocery stores, not on screens. They're the ones who decide how big or small the logo wants to be.
Also car companies, they're selling physical products. The material and built quality is one of the consideration to buy said product. So when car companies start removing their shine, glow, edges, shadow, texture, from their logo they're losing their tangible feeling. Instead they just flatten their logo.