Wednesday, May 6, 2015

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

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Whether you’re building a new website, a new app, or a dashboard, you can’t do without great icons.

The Web is in love with icons, they’re used everywhere from apps to responsive sites, all because they pack information into a small space. And because each set of icons is unique, you can give a different voice to a design, just by switching between sets.

Today we’ve put together the best icon sets so far from 2015. Some have been released in the last 4 months, others have had significant updates.

There’s a ton of different themes here, ranging from business, to leisure, and of course plenty of weather icons. There’s also a wide range of types, with some designers favoring flat design, and others reincarnating skeuomorphic design. Some of these icons have been designed by leading names in the field, others are just regular designers who wanted to give something back to the community.

All of the icons here are crystal clear vectors; some are drawn in Photoshop, some in Illustrator, and some in Sketch. All of them are free to download and use in personal or commercial projects. 

32 icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Weather icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Flat icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

45 free transport icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Fauna Precolombina Set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Thin Line UI Icons 170

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Free Shopping Cart Icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Free Download — Icon Set 2015

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

30 line icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Icono – Pure CSS Icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Happy Friday Space Travelers

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Objects Icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Free line icon pack

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

90 Free Line Icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Free File Type Icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Boldo – Free Icon Set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Travel icon set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Carnival icon set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

100 free kitchen icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Free social circles

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Polygon free flat icons set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

School subjects

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

18 flat icons set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Geometric icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Icons pack #4

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

48 icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Freeline

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Simple icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Weather icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Heart icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Free Set Colorful Ficons Icons 42+

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Icons pack #2

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

25 Zombies icons

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Calendar icons set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Icon sets pack

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Business icon set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

Viro

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

 

New York Buildings Icons Set

40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015

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40 best free icon sets, Spring 2015


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Tuesday, May 5, 2015

4 essential steps before you launch your design startup

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Many of us dream of being our own boss, being able to set our own hours and choose what kind of work we take on. But achieving this aim takes years, and even the first step can feel intimidating. Giving up that regular paycheck and setting up on your own is a big step. That is why it is important we prepare beforehand.

Before you consider leaving your existing job take the time to build your business so that on day one you have the basics in place: things like a reputation that will bring in work.

1) Build a reputation

In our industry, reputation is everything. If you have a good reputation then people will think of you when they come to hire. It will also increase the chances of you winning work. Whether you are planning to go independent soon or in several years, it is never too early to start building your reputation.

Despite what many say, reputation is not just about producing good work. Relying on word of mouth recommendation alone will leave you wondering where the next piece of work will come from. To build a reputation, you need to put yourself out there. You need to be entering awards, blogging your experiences and networking at conferences.

Most importantly, you need to find yourself a niche. You need to be able to express what you do and who you do it for.

Before you launch your business, people need to already be aware of you. They need to know you as ‘that guy who does amazing iOS interfaces’ or ‘the woman who has done all those great charity websites’. Focusing on a particular area increases the chance that somebody hears of you, if looking at that specific area. If you try and be a jack of all trades you will spread yourself too thin to have much impact.

Not that the quality of your work is unimportant. That is what helps you build a loyal client base.

2) Build a client base

One of the hardest parts of setting up your own business is finding those first few clients. This is not something you want to do when you are desperate for money. This will lead you to accept work from bad clients or reduce prices to ensure you win. Instead, the best time to win your first few clients is before you set up the business when you have a regular salary still coming in.

Some people reduce the number of hours they work at their day job so that they can build up a separate client base. You may not have the luxury of being able to do that; so instead you will need to work weekends and evenings for a short while to get those initial few clients under your belt.

These clients are important because they may well lead to repeat business and recommendations. At the least, they will look good in your portfolio and give you something to talk about on your blog (you do have one of those don’t you?)

But taking on a few clients while still paid by the day job has one more benefit: it allows you to earn some extra money.

3) Build your reserves

It is hard building a client base in the evenings and weekends, while still holding down a full-time job. You may think you are due a reward. You may want to spend some of that hard earned cash to treat yourself. Resist the urge!

No matter how well you prepare to launch your new business, some months will be better than others. The chances are you will not always break even; and that means you will need some cash reserves behind you. Not only will these cash reserves help you pay the bills, they will also stop you getting too desperate and stressed. If you’re worrying about money, it will undermine your productivity. It will also damage the chance of you winning quality work because you will be desperate to close a deal.

You will also need those reserves to help pay some initial setup costs for your business. They will also help cover the inevitable unexpected costs that will crop up in the first few months of work. No matter how well you plan, you will always miss some expense. There will always be some surprise. That is why you need reserves and time to build up experience of running your business before going full time.

4) Build your experience

Many people are ill-prepared for striking out on their own, even when they think they understand what is involved. Too often we believe ourselves capable of running a business because we think we will be doing the same work we’ve been doing for years.

But there is so much more to running a business than building websites. Or offering any kind of digital service. There is:

  • the financial side to the business, from chasing invoices to paying taxes;
  • the paperwork involved in founding the company;
  • purchasing the software and equipment to operate daily;
  • the client and project management issues.

The list could go on…

None of these areas are particularly difficult to master, but they will take time. The problem is that you need to hit the ground running with your new business. To be profitable from day one you will need to be earning revenue within the first month. This means you cannot waste time learning new skills or dealing with the logistics of setting up the business.

That is why it is important to have this already in place by the time you go full-time. As you build your client base in the weekends and evenings make sure you treat this part-time business as if it is the real thing. Set yourself up properly so that when you do finally go full-time everything is already in place.

Give yourself a break

Setting up by yourself is a pressurised experience. So give yourself a break and make the transition as easy as possible by preparing beforehand.

 

Featured image, ready image via Shutterstock.

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4 essential steps before you launch your design startup


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Monday, May 4, 2015

Mythbusting UX design: 7 misconceptions about user experience

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While web design has become a hot commodity in today’s competitive market, many clients still don’t have a clear understanding of what exactly they are trying to accomplish with their website. The most frequently listed goal is “establishing an online presence”, but the sheer vagueness of the statement makes it not much more than wishful thinking.

This is why user experience, or UX design, is very much in demand: it’s a fresh take on the design process; one that emphasizes ease of use and access for the user, instead of useless features or design elements. One of the main purposes of UX design is finding the right balance between adhering to the users’ needs and accomplishing business goals of the website.

Of course, since UX design is a relatively fresh concept, there are still a lot of misconceptions on the subject, ranging from the simple misunderstanding of the fundamental principles of the UX, to reaching false conclusions on the approaches that work.

So here are seven of the most common UX design myths that are still doing the rounds well into 2015. Let’s put them to bed once and for all…

1) UX is optional

All businesses have a user experience. It’s just that not all businesses design their user experience. When your company dispatches an invoice, the tone of that invoice can be on-brand, or it can be a template; both solutions will get you paid, but one of them also stands a better chance of retaining your customer’s business. When your company answers the phone, you can match the approach of your website, or you can provide a disjointed approach; both result in a conversation, but one stands a better chance of winning new business.

Think of how awesome it is to watch a service like Netflix on your phone whilst you commute, then to automatically transfer to your TV when you get home. That’s a consistent user experience. If Netflix didn’t tie those two devices together, you’d be getting the same product, but the user experience wouldn’t be so sweet.

2) Users make rational choices

The misconception that has caused the most businesses to fail ever, would probably be that users make rational decisions. Thousands, if not millions of great ideas have failed because people didn’t account for the fact that just because your product is the rational choice when you take into account all the objective facts, it won’t necessarily be the choice for people in your market.

Sometimes subjective, irrational aspects influence the buying decision the most; and figuring out those triggers for your user experience can make all the difference.

3) You understand your users

Perhaps the most common mistake of any business marketing itself, is believing that it understands its audience, knows what they like, and what they expect from the company. This should be made clear to all businesses: you always love your product too much, and think that others must love it, too. The only way to achieve results is to test everything and collect clear, comparable and objective data.

Understanding customers can only come from in-depth research. If a company makes assumptions about the experience users need, then the company is designing for itself. Sure, you’ll hit the mark by chance sometimes, but if you want to be confident designing a user experience assume you know nothing, and research research research.

4) UX is a type of web design

Many still look at UX design as some magical formula that’s supposed to “fix” a design’s problems, but in fact, UX design encompasses the entire design process and beyond. If a brand is a company’s values, then UX is how the company implements those values.

UX plays a huge role in web design, but its importance extends beyond the Web into every aspect of a business and especially into areas where that business connects with its customers.

5) UX is just about usability

While usability is an essential part of any UX and web design, the fact is that natural principles of business and targeting can’t be ignored as well. In order for a design to be a success both financially and as a branding tool, learnability and behavioral-emotional responses by the target audience have to be studied and then implemented. It represents an essential part of the equation in the success of a project.

6) UX is a one time thing

Perhaps one of the more common UX design myths is that it is a project that can be finished and put to bed. The fact is that because of the insurmountable opportunities for improvement, and the ever-changing landscape of the online markets, only those that continually monitor and work to improve their user experience can achieve measurable and sustainable success.

When companies implement a UX design, it’s not about choosing to rebrand, or adding a new channel to contact customers. UX design results in a UX strategy, and that strategy needs to be referred back to anytime a decision is taken in the company.

7) UX design is about new technology

In this age of technology, many businesses have been dazzled by the flashy possibilities of new, emerging technology, but just because a new technology is available, doesn’t mean that it’s the best option, especially when it comes to UX design. Technology is just a tool to achieve results, which means improving the user experience; and if it doesn’t serve that purpose, it’s simply a waist of time and resources.

Remember that UX design is about the customer, and customers often don’t have the time or inclination to retrain in order to understand something new. Implementing new technology is fine, provided that it meshes seamlessly with your existing business so that established customers aren’t alienated.

Summary

Even though UX design is increasingly recognized as an essential tool for business, too many clients, and too many designers, view it as part of a website design project. That couldn’t be further from the truth. UX design is an all-encompassing approach that covers everything from web design through to customer service. Running an ecommerce store, UX design covers not only the design of your site, but your returns policy too. Running a blog, UX design gives your unsubscribe process as much attention as your sign-up.

The most important thing to remember is that all businesses have a user experience, it’s just that the smart ones choose to design theirs, the others leave it to chance.

 

Featured image, user experience design image via Shutterstock.

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Mythbusting UX design: 7 misconceptions about user experience


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Sunday, May 3, 2015

Our favorite tweets of the week: April 27, 2015 – May 3, 2015

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Every week we tweet a lot of interesting stuff highlighting great content that we find on the web that can be of interest to web designers.

The best way to keep track of our tweets is simply to follow us on Twitter, however, in case you missed some here’s a quick and useful compilation of the best tweets that we sent out this past week.

Note that this is only a very small selection of the links that we tweeted about, so don’t miss out.

To keep up to date with all the cool links, simply follow us @DesignerDepot

Japan-themed paper cup sleeves by Akira Yoshimura  via

 

The Legend of Zelda: A link to past – HTML5 Map

 

Creative by Yippie Hey

 

SXSW 2015 Gaming Awards

 

Dieter Rams talks

 

How to survive working from home

 

Podcasting on Soundcloud

 

Curated RFPs for web designers, developers and agencies

 

Some icons are verbs, some icons are nouns

 

Kickbox by : an innovation kit for organizations

 

Responsive vs. Adaptive Design: What’s the Best Choice for Designers?

 

Why the Golden Ratio matters

 

The Avengers Poster in Photoshop  via

 

Generate Fake Data for Your JavaScript Applications Using Faker

 

Buffer for Pinterest

 

You want great to happen. You want it now. And you want it all the time.  via

 

Is it worth paying for a Premium WordPress Theme or not?

 

Designing Apps for the Apple Watch  /

 

Want more? No problem! Keep track of all our tweets by following us @DesignerDepot

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Our favorite tweets of the week: April 27, 2015 May 3, 2015


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Saturday, May 2, 2015

Comics of the week #285

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Every week we feature a set of comics created exclusively for WDD.

The content revolves around web design, blogging and funny situations that we encounter in our daily lives as designers.

These great cartoons are created by Jerry King, an award-winning cartoonist who’s one of the most published, prolific and versatile cartoonists in the world today.

So for a few moments, take a break from your daily routine, have a laugh and enjoy these funny cartoons.

Feel free to leave your comments and suggestions below as well as any related stories of your own…

Don’t ask

Comics of the week #285 

A new take on contrast

Comics of the week #285

 

The accessible designer

Comics of the week #285

Can you relate to these situations? Please share your funny stories and comments below…

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Comics of the week #285


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Friday, May 1, 2015

Microsoft Edge: What designers need to know

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This week Microsoft introduced its new browser, Edge, the project that had formerly been known as Project Spartan.

Much has been made of its Hub feature, and the ability to add personal annotations to websites. However, these features are aimed at regular users, web designers will use the browser in quite a different way; whilst it’s unlikely that the majority of web designers will switch to Edge as their primary browser, the majority of us will be using it on a daily basis to test code.

Whilst we don’t know exactly how Edge will perform until we get hands-on with it, there are some things we do know, and others that we can infer.

A change of approach

When I first saw the Edge announcement, what struck me most was the change in emphasis embodied by its logo. Brands are designed to a brief handed down from board level, and so the change of identity likely mimics similar briefs being handed down to development teams.

Microsoft Edge: What designers need to know

In Internet Explorer’s logo, the ‘e’ sits motionless as the rotation occurs around it; for Microsoft, IE was literally the center of the Web, with all other technologies orbiting it.

Microsoft no longer sees itself as the center of the Web

In Edge’s logo, the orbital ring has been dropped, and the rotation is now part of the ‘e’ itself; as well as being more minimal, it’s also more humble; Microsoft no longer sees itself as the center of the Web.

This change indicates a shift in approach and hints at an increasing awareness of a wider set of interests, from cross-corporation cooperation, to adherance to web standards.

The other notable thing about the logo is that the stroke on the ‘e’ opens up the aperture, making the character far more legible at smaller devices sizes. An indication that Microsoft has finally embraced mobile.

Mobile focus

Even the least informed companies are aware of the growth of the mobile web, so it’s hardly surprising that Microsoft Edge is aimed squarely at the mobile market.

Mobile appears to be one of the key areas to have persuaded the Microsoft board of the need for change. According to netmarketshare.com, IE has a 56% share of desktop browsing, but only a 2.05% share of the mobile browser market. A far cry from the days when the company boasted over 90% of all online traffic.

We’ve been told that Edge will be the only browser pre-installed on Windows mobile devices, and will be, for the time-being, an optional download on desktops. Many businesses are slow to upgrade desktop machines — it’s truly frightening how many are still using XP — so the decision to run two browsers in parallel frees up Edge to make ground in the mobile market, whilst still allowing luddites their comfort blanket.

What has not been made public is whether Edge will be available on Android or iOS devices. However, given that global Android sales are 400% that of Windows Mobile sales, it seems inevitable that in order to make inroads into the mobile market, Microsoft will have to port Edge to other platforms. An Android version is probably in the works, and an iOS version is likely to follow.

What this means is that we’ll be facing not one, but three new browsers to test on. How consistent they will be, or the timescale for their introduction is unknown, probably even by Microsoft.

Evolution, not revolution

Despite Microsoft’s marketing, Edge is not a revolutionary browser, at least not as far as web designers are concerned.

According to caniuse.com CSS support in Edge is roughly 6% better than IE11, exactly the same rate of progression from IE10 to IE11. The steady pace suggests that under the hood, Edge is very much IE12.

under the hood, Edge is very much IE12

However Edge still only supports 75% of what Chrome offers, and there are some extremely disappointing ommisions: Edge does not support the Picture element, which is central to plans to finally resolve responsive images. Thankfully there is partial support for srcset, albeit a subset of the full spec.

There is partial support for the Grid Layout specification, although support is for an older spec. This seems to mimic IE’s Flexbox support, which began as support for an older spec before full support was later added. This approach seems to work for Microsoft, but it will leave us dependent on browser prefixes for some years to come.

Unfortunately CSS Filters haven’t made it into the build, meaning Photoshop image effects are still dependent on Photoshop. But in keeping with the mobile push, Edge does offer support for touch events, the first Microsoft browser to do so.

Conclusion

Microsoft Edge is a lighter, faster browser than the unfairly maligned Internet Explorer, but most of its innovations come for users.

For web designers taking Edge into account when designing and building websites, the most significant thing about Edge may be the rate at which it encourages users to abandon legacy versions of Internet Explorer.

Edge’s advances don’t exceed those of the last two versions of Internet Explorer, but perhaps the change of name is the final piece of the puzzle required for web designers to accept the fact that Microsoft finally has a decent browser.

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Microsoft Edge: What designers need to know


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