Every app needs a beautiful and memorable icon that attracts attention both in the app store and on the home screen. At the same time, an app icon should be helpful for your user — it’s meaning should be recognizable immediately.
What does it take to make a user-friendly icon with perfect aesthetics? It’s not that hard, here are three simple rules to follow:
Icons must first and foremost communicate meaning. People shouldn’t have to analyze the icon to figure out what it represents.
Your icon is the first opportunity to communicate, at a glance, your app’s purpose. When you design an icon for your app, keep in mind a very important moment: icons communicate ideas using metaphorical associations — user associates an icon with a certain object or action — and if that object or action isn’t immediately clear to users, the icon simply doesn’t work. Thus, it’s simply essential to make your icons clear and intuitive:
What does the Game Center icon mean? How does it relate to gaming?
What does the Game Center icon mean? How does it relate to gaming?
An image of an envelope says “mail”
Find an element that captures the essence of your app and expresses that element in a simple shape. Remove all extra details that aren’t essential for your icon.
Most designers want their app icons to look great. But sometimes designers go overboard and give their icons too much specific detail. Such details may cause visual noise that hinders people and affect UX:
Don’t repeat the name of your app, because the app’s name appears below its icon on the Home screen.
Don’t include photos or screenshots.
A balance in detail is important in making your icons clear and intuitive:
Do. Sun and cloud are the only characteristics needed to tell users that the icon means ‘weather’.
Icons should be legible against their backgrounds.
Designing recognizable and minimalist icon isn’t the finish of the entire process. As well as for any other UI object, post-design testing of the created element is the must-do. You can’t predict which wallpaper people will choose for their home screen, so you need to see how it looks over different photos:
Don’t make users hunt for the icons.
Don’t use transparent icons
Try your icon on an actual device with a dynamic background that changes perspective as the device moves.
Now, take time to design a beautiful and engaging icon that perfectly represents your app.
About the Author: Nick Babich is a software developer and author of a blog dedicated to usability
Title image: Michael Shanks
Also, get the lists of free vector software and free photo editing software.
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