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Showing posts with label Featured. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Featured. Show all posts

Friday, September 29, 2017

Thinking About Design Thinking: Is It Important?

September 29, 2017
Design thinking is the biggest buzzword in the design world since flat design. Everyone is talking about it… even non-designers. So what is design thinking? Is it important? Should you care?
Here’s the good news: design thinking is something that’s probably part of what you “just do” even if you didn’t have a name for it. Design thinking is another way to think about problem-solving. Let’s take a closer look, and delve into what it means, and why it can be useful!

Design Thinking = Problem Solving

design thinking
Design thinking is just another way to talk about problem-solving. Every design project you take on aims to solve some sort of problem for the client, whether it is helping more people learn about their company through a website, getting people into a store with a coupon or enticing people to buy something with an amazing package design.
But design thinking is more than just problem-solving. It is a hands-on approach to developing solutions.
Design thinking breaks all this down into a process of sorts. The Nielsen Norman Group, which studies user experience and does training and consulting, might have one of the best visual representations of design thinking out there. It looks like this:
  • Understand
  • Explore
  • Materialize
Every phase of design falls into one of these main areas. Think about projects you are working on. They start with a design brief or outline (understanding), then you move on to brainstorm ideas and produce sketches or mockups to spur thought (explore) and you finish by taking all that stuff and creating a design to solve the problem presented initially (materialize).
The process can break down even more into six phases within that overall process:
  • Empathize
  • Define
  • Ideate
  • Prototype
  • Test
  • Implement
So why is design thinking new again? Thinkers in other disciplines have grabbed on to the concepts to improve their problem-solving processes. (So it looks like designers were on to something pretty awesome all along.)

History of Design Thinking

While the buzzword is new, design thinking is not.Some of the biggest names in the design world such as IDEO’s Tim Brown (he’s got a blog called Design Thinking) have been talking about it for decades. It’s the basis for Roger Martin’s 2009 book, “The Design of Business: Why Design Thinking is the Next Competitive Advantage.” You can even trace it back to the designers of the Eames chairs in the early 1900s.
The new iteration of design thinking just seems to think about it more consciously. What are we doing in the process of coming up with viable design solutions? And how can we model future projects on past success?

What Does This Mean for Your Work?

Thinking about the way you think and process problems and solutions can help you develop better answers.
When it comes to design thinking and actual design why does this matter? (Especially if we have established that many designers already do this subconsciously?) Because we can be better.
When it comes to designing and creativity, thinking about the way you think and process problems and solutions can help you develop better answers. In essence, you can be a better designer.
Let’s apply the design thinking model to a web design project.
  • Understand: What does the user need, want or expect? Get to know the users that are the target audience for the project. Map them out, create personas and get out and chat with actual users. (Remember, design thinking is a hands-on approach.)
  • Explore: This is the time to get creative. Toss out every wild idea into the open. See what parts stick. Play with it. Create sketches or wireframes that help you better see the idea in action. Share these ideas with the team and see how people respond to them.
  • Materialize: Now go build it. And when you finish, take it back to those users you initially talked to. What do they think? Does it work? Does it solve their problem?
  • Repeat: There’s nothing that says this process gives you a usable answer in the first go round. You might have to go back to any step and try again. Don’t get discouraged. It is OK to fail from time to time.

Why Design Thinking?

design thinking
When it comes to something different, there’s always some pushback. Do you feel the need to sell the concept of design thinking to your team?
The advantages are clear:
  • Design thinking focuses on the end user. You aren’t designing something because it looks good or uses a cool trend or technique, you are doing it to make users happy.
  • Design thinking is rooted in teamwork, where every person brings a level of expertise to the conversation.
  • Design thinking considers the human nature of empathy and emotion, and how these things can be powerful elements in the design. (You can find disaster if you don’t think about the human side of it all).
  • Design thinking encourages testing. Lots of it. Revisions can be the key to success. Don’t be afraid to rethink things.
  • Design thinking solves actual problems. It takes you back to the reason you are designing something in the first place. What are you trying to accomplish? How will you help/educate/delight the user?

Conclusion

You don’t have to change the way you work tomorrow, but you should think about design thinking and how it can impact you and your team. Try the process and see if it helps your brainstorming. Step back and look at how you are already developing ideas; how close to this process are you already?
Design thinking isn’t just a fad that will be gone in another month. It’s gaining traction in other areas – education, science, management, etc. – because there’s something about it that seems to just click. Solving problems in meaningful ways never gets old. (And it’s pretty cool to think designers were at the head of this curve.)
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Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Essential Elements Of Logo

August 30, 2017

Logo Design Essential Elements: Knowing the key elements of a memorable logo and how they work will help to communicate properly with your eventual logo designer, but also to make a proper final choice on the logo that represents brand the best. To begin with, a logo is not just some colors, fonts and lines combined. It is a brand’s identity, to the extent that a logo is usually more recognizable than the brand’s name. A good logo, with the right characteristics, will increase your visibility and credibility – which means 
more business


1. The Graphic Element | Logo Design Essential Elements


The graphic element in a logo can be an icon, a pattern, an illustration or even a designed line. Whatever its shape, the graphic element is always versatile. It needs to be able to match with the entire logo and stand alone as the single symbol of your brand. The elements of graphic design are used, and often mixed together, to create graphic works. They are not to be confused with principles of design, such as balance or white space, but rather the elements such as color, fonts, and images. A powerful graphic can make or break a design.


2. The Font Logo Design Essential Elements

Font choice is the most important element of logo design and one that should never be neglected. The right font can increase the strengths of your logo and your brand, while the wrong font can be a customer buzz-kill. Choice of font plays a critical role in your brand’s logo design and overall brand identity, especially in water mark logo design, where the type is your logo. Custom fonts help ensure that your unique logo will stay that way forever.


3. The Color | Logo Design Essential Elements


Color is always the most obvious thing about a design. We’re taught colors from early stages, and even go so far as to identify some of our personal belongings with color descriptors. Color is capable of creating strong feelings among people, who consciously and subconsciously apply certain meanings or emotions to various colors. Color is utilized to generate emotions, define importance, create visual interest and unify branding. So most importantly, the color scheme of your brand and your logo should be based on what resonates best with your target audience.

4. The Shape | Logo Design Essential Elements

The shape is basically an area that is contained within an implied line or is seen and identified due to color or value changes. Whether it be geometric or something more organic, a recognizable shape is memorable long after it leaves our view. Geometric shapes are simple to recognize and stand for organization, efficiency, and structure. Further, the symmetry of geometric shapes stands for order.


5. The Form | Logo Design Essential Elements


Forms are simply the three-dimensional objects within a certain design. The simplest forms are: cube, pyramid, cylinder etc.

Forms and shapes can be visualized as positive or negative. In a two dimensional composition, the objects provide the positive forms, while the background is the negative space. For starting art and design students, effective utilization of negative space is by far the most important concept to be mastered.

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Why are so many conpanies changing their logos to flt design?

August 30, 2017

Flat designs have spiked significantly in the past few years, in brand identity redesigns of some of the biggest players in the corporate world.
Major brands like Apple, Microsoft, and Hershey have gone flat I would say it’s here to stay, at least for a while. It’s a heated debate in graphic design communities, and here’s why.
Minimal but not Boring
Ease of Use
Flat designs are easy to use on different platforms
Flat designs are battery savers
Flat designs are easy to design
Three-dimensional designs, as we know, are created in such a way that they have a live 3D effect to it. Flat designs on the other hand, as its name suggests, are the designs that are flat in nature with no gradients, shadows, or texture. These designs are simple and minimal with no three-dimensional effects added to the design. There are a lot of reasons for which companies have shifted from 3D designs to flat ones.


A very obvious reason to the shift is the fact that the market is doing so. Companies and brands wish to appear updated and fresh and hence, the change is vital to be made. If not given due attention, in this regard, the brand would be whipped out from the market.
Another reason for the shift to flat design is the fact that 3D logos have a lot of gradients, shadows, and gloss making them almost impossible to match with the different platforms, on which they have to be placed, without alterations. On the other hand, flat designs are simple yet colorful which allows them to look good on all platforms with no or less alteration required.
Also, since, the flat designs encompass lesser colors and details; they are good at saving battery. The space saved hence can be utilized for the showcase of relevant and more attractive items.
Finally, in this world of ease and comfort, designers too wish for a task that gives them room for relaxation. Hence, designs that are high in quality and low in efforts are the most cherished ones. Flat designs, precisely accommodate these features while being easy to make and attractive enough to steal the show.

You can check my logo gig on FIVERR Linkedin
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