I’m not a UI designer, more of a dataviz person, but I find your videos fascinating and instructive for things about the visual presentation of information generally.
I’m not gonna troll here - I actually think these videos are excellently done and offer a massive amount of design wisdom. As a UX guy who’s been doing this for 30 years, I have to take exception to the snackbar design at 0:45. Let’s just freeze frame and look at this thing. A tick and a cross are semantically opposite, and yet here they are presented with equal prominence. One is an icon indicating status, the other is a button inviting action. This kind of thing makes normal dumb users confused. We can just ignore them and call them unenlightened and stupid, but unfortunately they are the people using your product. And this is why I fundamentally dislike flat design and long for this design fad to evolve into something more functional.
"If something can mean anything, then it really doesn't mean anything at all." Everyone knows redefining a word to mean anything destroys that word, but it's funny that people can admit common sense observations in a context like interface design that they will deny in other contexts, like gender.
I’m not a UI designer, more of a dataviz person, but I find your videos fascinating and instructive for things about the visual presentation of information generally.
I'm so glad! Dataviz is fascinating as well.
What a nice and original way of explaining color and it's uses, thanks y'all, i really do appreciatte it.
Glad you enjoy!
Great video! Very informative, and I didn't know about color systems, only color palletes.
I'm sure this channel'll do great.
Thank you!
Mac uses a very subtle wallpaper color-tinted background on the content pane in Finder or System Settings. 3rd party apps can use this feature too.
that intro animation was so sick
Thank goodness for Motion Array templates.
@@chainliftwebdesign Clean Minimalist Logo Reveal By Useful&More fits so well with the channel i almost thought it was custom made hahahh nice
Informative and fun watch. Really love all your videos. Want more from you.
More to come!
Your videos and tool kits are just too good 🤯🤯🤯🤯
I'm so happy you're using them!
Underrated youtuber
Awesome video, awesome Figma kit, v informative channel.
thanks a ton! I'm glad you like it!
We need a discord community
There is one! Link in the description
@@chainliftwebdesign awesome
Actually it says link has expired
didn't know they did that my b, it's fixed now
Nice content as usual 👌
Thank you 🙌
I’m not gonna troll here - I actually think these videos are excellently done and offer a massive amount of design wisdom. As a UX guy who’s been doing this for 30 years, I have to take exception to the snackbar design at 0:45. Let’s just freeze frame and look at this thing. A tick and a cross are semantically opposite, and yet here they are presented with equal prominence. One is an icon indicating status, the other is a button inviting action. This kind of thing makes normal dumb users confused. We can just ignore them and call them unenlightened and stupid, but unfortunately they are the people using your product. And this is why I fundamentally dislike flat design and long for this design fad to evolve into something more functional.
I too yearn for a revival of 2010s skeumorphism. This is a really good take. Thank you for sharing!
9:06 what if the seed colour is red 😅
Same thing. It finds a different shade of red.
waiting for part 2 👁👁
5:18 😂
Interesting
Thanks a ton!
i love you bro
i'm waiting for part 2 & any video you'll upload
werk
It’s been four months, I was concerned 😅
Dear God has it really been that long?
"If something can mean anything, then it really doesn't mean anything at all."
Everyone knows redefining a word to mean anything destroys that word, but it's funny that people can admit common sense observations in a context like interface design that they will deny in other contexts, like gender.
You really thought you did something there, huh? Keep your bigoted social opinions to yourself bro; this is a video on UI design…