UX/UI Design Trends: What’s In Store for Us in 2019?
For some years, the emphasis on voice-based interaction has reached the optimum in UI and UX design. Voice interactions through Chatbots, voice-controlled speakers and voice search across the web and mobile app UIs helped to bring voice interaction into the limelight of the UI and UX design. Voice search and voice interactions have consistently been major UI and UX trends throughout 2017 and 2018. In 2019 and beyond, we can only expect this trend to be louder and more prominent than ever before.
You already search Google on the go with voice commands, right? Well, that's what half of the population searching web on mobile does. Many of us even listen to the news by tuning onto the voice-enabled Google Home or Amazon Echo. All we need is to tell the speaker the news or content we need and it reads it aloud for us. It works in so simple a manner. Well, voice interplay in the UI and UX has just begun and throughout 2019 and beyond we can expect it to be a bigger trend with new innovations in terms of use and applications.
4. Self-Explanatory Illustrations
Engaging users instantly is something that every application wants to achieve. Earlier, onboarding experience needed to take particular commands and measures to help users learn about using an interface. For some time now, the on-screen design elements became more self-explanatory and intuitive to guide users more effortlessly. Self-explanatory illustrations can help users knowing the way they need to use the app and the ways they need to navigate for accessing contents. Self-explanatory illustrations seem to become a moving design trend for the UI and UX in 2019 and beyond.
5. 3D Interface And Deep Flat
You can now easily augment an image with computer graphics and render 3D viewing. But it is no longer just a fun exercise for visual experiments. Modern computer graphics and 3D images are increasingly becoming crucial UI design elements allowing more self-explanatory viewing.
3D viewing has always been subjected to constraints of performance and speed. Now, 3D rendering of images can is getting more supports from advanced browser capability. As browsers are even allowing to turn the screen for high definition visual experience comparable to movie screens, 3D rendering into UI and UX design will become more commonplace.
Rendering 3D objects apart, even the material design principle with its subtle gradients, shadows and depth is facilitating design comparable to a more 3D object like appearance. As a web and mobile app UI us turning towards more life-like simulation, 3D elements will continue to enjoy more pride of place in UI and UX design.
6. Surreal Design
The 3D rendering, computer graphics, motion design and high definition visual experience all of them together are paving the way for more impactful design than ever before. They are apt to fire the imagination with crisp, sophisticated and fanciful design elements that can easily engage the audience. Such exuberance in visual design will ultimately give birth to surreal design.
Playfulness and fun elements largely perpetrated by social media memes, visual experiments and animations have given today's designers too many fun ways to engage users visually. This approach evolved into a fully fledged surreal design. From cartoon styled illustration to fantasy filled experiments with colours, fonts and contrasts, in everything we can experience the coming of surreal design elements.
7. UX Writing & UX Editing
Earlier designers only used to give the written words a visual feel with an appropriate choice of typeface. They were not supposed to get into the meaning and impact of the text. Now, designers are becoming equally engaged in deciding about the text that fit the context and visual organisation of words and text. The purpose is to give a more meaningful impact with the written text and their visual representation.
From tagline, ad-line, titles, headings, sub-headings to writing bold brand messages, everywhere designers are equally playing a role to edit and optimise the text along with visuals. This gave birth to two new terms, respectively UX writing and UX editing. In 2019 and beyond, they will continue to play a major role in shaping the interplay of written words and visual design.
8. Buttonless UI
Buttonless UI referring to a complete web or mobile app interface without a single button has become the latest and one of the dominant design trends of our time. Reasonably, we can expect this design trend to stay viable for more number of web and mobile user interfaces. This design trend has been inspired particularly by some social platforms and leading apps like Instagram that do not require any button to navigate and move from one content to another or for taking up another action.
The buttonless user interface will basically help to facilitate more effortless user experience. Thanks to this new design approach, users can easily navigate across contents and pages at ease. In ecommerce apps, the absence of buttons will help easier and more effortless checkout process requiring no clicking of Call to Action buttons.
9. Overlapping Impacts
This design trend is already there for some time and it is continuing to play a major role for many visually engaging apps. Overlapping of fonts, colours and illustration can create more room for rendering messages through design besides allowing more playfulness and exuberance.
A vast majority of app UI and UX designers began to use this design element more wisely and with diligence. By utilising overlapping visual elements combined with shadows can not only augment the impact to the maximum but can also help to deliver brand messages with more perfection and precision.
10. Hero Images for Landing Pages
Hero images are used very frequently at the top of the apps and they provide the look and feel of large banners in apps. Obviously, over the years they became a crucial aspect of mobile app and web UI design. Hero images can quickly orient the user with the purpose and brand message.
Now, hero images are also being used in landing pages. With a classy image delivering the brand message the landing page can connect to the users more easily long before the users actually start reading the printed words. In 2019, we can expect more websites and mobile apps to use hero images in their landing pages.
11. Design Tool Taking Responsibility For Implementation
Designers are increasingly showing interest in coding to stay competitively superior. By simply knowing how to code an app a designer can totally avoid many nuances and render his design on a solid foundation. But designers who can't code can adopt some really useful tools like Figma.
Designers no longer have to be concerned about an array of variables and constraints ranging from integrations, plugins, storages, operating systems, synchronization, collaboration, etc. There is a design tool called Figma that can not only deliver the most sophisticated sketches and layout designs but can take full responsibility for implementing them as well.
Do you want to know more about designing your app or website with more sophisticated and user-centric attributes? Do you want us to tell how we can ensure design excellence for your app as per latest trends? Just feel free to drop us a message and let us explain you everything.