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Designers, please stop presenting your work with rounded corners

Christiaan van Eijk
Bootcamp
Published in
3 min readNov 16, 2020

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Image (screenshot) taken by author (Screenshot of a Dribbble search for: ‘UI Dashboard’)

Platforms like Pinterest, Dribbble, and Behance have exploded with inspiring design content for ui-designers. And while a lot of it looks amazing, I feel like a lot of trendy designs are misleading both you, and the designers who made them.

This article is not meant to hate on beautiful work by talented people, but to expand your arsenal of design skills by shedding some light on a topic I do not hear a lot of real talk about.

Let me explain.

UI-Design vs Real-world use

A lot of my work revolves around designing user interfaces.

With over 10 years of design (and development) experience, I have seen a lot of trends come, and go.

I have created a lot of designs that were awesome, and a lot of designs that simply sucked.

A lot of designs that looked amazing in XD, Sketch or Figma. But just didn’t seem to work once built into a useable interface. Why is this?

There are a lot of potential reasons for this happening, for instance:

  • The design isn’t flexible enough — failing on different screen sizes.
  • The design is too clean, ignoring a lot of important usability details.
  • The design ignores real-world-screen-formats.

All of the above are possible reasons for your design not transfering over to the real world well. But it’s the last one that annoys me the most. It’s one that you should look out for. Perhaps even one you are guilty of…

“UI-Design should work together with reality, not ignore it.”

Design for REAL devices.

Don’t fool yourself by designing your ui designs inside unrealistic screen-formats.’

Desktop & laptop screens, just like browsers, do NOT have rounded borders.

It’s important to be aware of the screen you are designing for. Designs made within a rounded screen-format often times fall flat when presented in a squared-of…

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Bootcamp
Bootcamp

Published in Bootcamp

From idea to product, one lesson at a time. To submit your story: https://tinyurl.com/bootspub1

Christiaan van Eijk
Christiaan van Eijk

Written by Christiaan van Eijk

Husband and father of two. Helping people become experts in the digital world.

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