this post was submitted on 25 Apr 2024
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This doesn't have anything to do with flat design. It's the fact that people take hammers and look at everything as a nail and go pounding things. Everything like this is a "contagion", people just latch onto hot button ideas and go crazy. Flat design in itself is fine, and extremely beneficial for what it was designed for, it's just overused because people chase trends.
Before flat it was skeumorphism and that was even worse. You had everything in tech trying to look like real things which made things way too busy and hard to read. And then people tried to make it work on tiny phones with low res displays and it was difficult to use.
Hence, flat design was born as a solution. It made icons easy to read on tiny devices. And it did a good job at that. It solved a problem and did it well and everything was well and good.
The problem was the next step where people decided they needed "consistent branding" so they did it on their website too. And then their marketing materials. And then their products. Then you had a problem.
Flat design works well for what it was made for: iconography. And for legibility of small UI. But it's not for everything. But people can't think for themselves and solve different problems in different ways. And Google made it easily available everywhere. And people picked that up and use it everywhere. And THAT is the problem.
I'd argue that designers don't even understand why they use Flat design in ui's. The purpose, as you said, is to reduce clutter. However designers don't understand this and remove all context from all UI elements. What is interactive and what is static is no longer discernable.
I'm writing this in Thunder and nothing in Thunder's UI shows any distinction between text that is interactive and text that is only text. You have to click the screen at random to see what happens.
Because of this, I'd argue that Skewmorphism is better because we have had 10 years of bad UI showing that designers do not know how to apply Flat design principles.
Skewmorphism is like garbage collection for programmers. A programming language doesn't need it and is faster without it but too many programmers for too long have shown they can't be trusted to write clean code.
I'd agree with everything you say about designers choosing to use flat designs without understanding the point. It's definitely overdone and this becomes a problem.
But your argument for skeuomorphism is a huge stretch. We had ten years of skeuomorphism also showing it just straight doesn't work in a lot of places. It becomes overloaded and hard to read.
But you're comparing it to absolute off the deep end applications of the opposite. Why not somewhere in the middle? The entire argument you make for it is just that "well people understood what was click able etc" which is literally just basic design principles and nothing to do with skeuomorphism uniquely.
Why can't we just expect UX people to do their jobs correctly? Why throw the baby out with the bath water in order to get a different baby we know has other issues?
We had 30 years of skeuomorphism starting with the Mac in 1984 and it always worked although suboptimal. Flat can be better but when not done right it's worse than skeu. I personally would rather have a UI that is more cluttered but always discoverable over a UI that isn't always obvious.
We can't expect UX people to do their jobs in the same way we can't expect programmers to do their job correctly.
I think flat design makes sense for logos too, for the exact same reason it makes sense for icons. Flat logos are easier to recognize and see, especially from far away.
I’m not saying this logo great or anything but I don’t think it’s fair to claim that everyone using flat design is just a trend chaser.
I never claimed they were all trend chasers - my point was that it had a good place and then trend chasers over did it, and those areas are problematic. There is a place for it where I think it deserves to stay, but people have used it in the wrong places and overdone it in others to the point where the overuse had started showing issues.