Description
The most crucial aspect to form a great user experience is having a beautifully crafted user interface. Some small changes to your aesthetics can have a huge impact on the experience of your users.
If you’re designing using a web application, you’re making decisions about typography, colour and composition that will affect the branding, style, usability and user experience of your application. You’re already making these decisions but are you aware of their impact. Very subtle use of typography and colour can have enough personality that we don’t need any other visuals. We can give life to a dull block of text and it can make it easier or harder for our users to read. Getting a few simple choices right can make or break the application.
Typography is 95% of what we see on a web application, it dictates every other design decision. yet few people really stop to learn how to use typography to their advantage.
Colour is what makes us differentiate everything in a design. If there was no colour we’d not be able to identify anything on a design. But it also has the most emotional connection of anything in a design and it can’t be easily categorised, as colours appear very different depending on their use and context. We have to use colour, so let’s learn to use colour to our advantage.
A grid makes our designs feel uniform. If we know how to use one, it’s the single thing that can make a design instantly feel more professional. But we need to understand the limitations and advantages of recent web development to create a grid that looks good on paper and still looks good on the web.
What do I get in this course?
To improve your skill in each of these areas: you’ll do a combination of learning some underlining theory, complete challenges to improve your intuition and some practical exercises to create some great-looking designs. A short description of each module is below.
Composition: practical exercises to improve your intuition when placing elements on a page
Typography: History and background of different type classifications
Selecting and Pairing: How to choose a typeface and how to select complimentary typefaces that work together
Readability: How do we read and how can we make it easier for people to read with our typographic choices
Styling & Formatting: What extra style can we add to our typography and how can we use this to improve our visual hierarchy
Grid Systems: The types of grids used in design and some of the technical limitations for modern application design
Building our Grid: How to ensure we set up the grids in our design software to work when developing applications
Colour Interactions: practical exercises to improve our intuitive use of colour when used in different contexts
How Colour Works: The physics behind how light works and how it creates colour
Colour Attributes: How to make changes to a colour to make it more useful in your design
Create our Pallet: practical steps to create a colour pallet that works specifically for UI
Visual Language: Choose photos, icons, illustrations and other visuals to support the design
Is this course for me?
Ideally, you’ll already have spent some time designing websites and/or applications. Every aspect of the course is created with beginners in mind but you may find you get more out of the course if you’ve already created some designs. You’ll also ideally need to know how to use some design software. I recommend Figma, but Adobe XD, Invission Studio, Sketch or some similar software will also be okay.
The course is created with designers in mind but it may also be of interest to front-end developers or product owners. There is a money-back guarantee with no questions asked and you can message me with any specific questions.
À qui ce cours s’adresse-t-il ?
Junior user interface designer
Front-end developer interested in learning about design
Product owner
Curious people
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