Neumorphism. The Next Big Thing In UI Design?

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New decade gives rise to new trends in UI design. ‘Soft design’, best known as ‘neumorphic design’, or ‘neumorphism’, is already catching an eye as one of the promising coming year new tendencies. In this post, OpenGeeksLab will uncover what neumorphism in UI is, and how to neumorph your app.

The Story Behind

The story begins with skeuomorphism in the 1980s. Steve Jobs, CEO and co-founder of Apple Inc., was one of its earliest avid proponents. The idea was that skeuomorphic interface design would provide users with much more intuitive experience by mimicking physical world graphical objects, shadows, shapes, details to a hyperreal degree.

Image source: Dribbble

Skeuomorphism engaged auditory/visual cues to capture users’ attention and show them how things work. It had its time and place in the first iOS versions design until the 2000s.

In 2007, Forbes stated that skeuomorphism is dead like a past life thing. This statement was accepted as the truth six years later after iOS had redesigned with style in 2013. Ever since Apple had settled on flat design.

Image source: Dribbble

Flat design, a minimalist and classically digital aesthetic, was inspired by the Swiss style.

Google, in turn, had rolled out material design.

Image source: Dribbble

Flat design and material design are being dominant in interface design so far, offering minimalism, convenience, personalization.

Rise of neumorphism as the hottest UI trend marked 2019, changing the ‘super flat and minimal’ vector to something midway to realism. Michal Malewicz published some posts on Medium about a ‘new skeuomorphism’ in UI design. Jason Kelley, in turn, proposed a new word ‘neumorphism’ made by joining two words ‘new’ and ‘skeuomorphism’ together.

Image source: Dribbble

Neumorphism mimics real-life objects. It brings clean interfaces to life through adding a physical element to flat UI paradigm.

What is Neumorphism?

Image source: Dribbble

Neumorphism combines developments of flat design and skeuomorphism. Neumorphism, or soft UI, is a visual style that combines background colors, shapes, gradients, highlights, and shadows to ensure graphic intense buttons and switches. All that allows achieving a soft, extruded plastic look, and almost 3D styling.

This way, neumorphic cards, buttons, progress bars have a dark box-shadow below and a light box-shadow above, which creates the look and feel that user interface components are being pushed through a display.

It is worth noting that neumorphism is not a replacement for flat design style, but an addition to app user interface design.

How to Neumorph your UI: Issues to Consider

You can apply neumorphism to a mobile app, desktop, or web one. Yet, there are some issues regarding accessibility/visibility, particularly buttons. Thus, buttons may have not enough contrast to be easily spotted for people with vision impairments. Some problems may arise with poor quality screens or lower screen brightness/contrast.

Also, some issues occur regarding ways to efficiently code components, customize buttons, inputs styles based on the concept of neumorphism. There are few libraries so far, but new ones are beginning to emerge:

  • React Native components based on the concept of Neumorphism (iOS only).
  • Neumorphic UI, a library of components based on the concept of neumorphism.
  • Neumorphism.io, soft-UI CSS code generator

In this way. neumorphism will carry your entire product to success and create a significant impact only with the right mix of other UI styles that already exist. If combined with higher contrast elements and good typography, neumorphism provides the right vibe, as well as keeps UI design accessible and user-friendly.

Go Fire up Your Design

Neumorphism, as one of the newest trends in UI, brings a breath of fresh air to app user interface design, looks soft, easy on the eyes. And people seem to like it.

Neumorphism gives you aesthetic freedom to experiment with it. But keep in mind that it has to be carefully designed and wittily implemented to ensure smoothness and usability.

Don’t be shy to contact us. We will set your mobile app interface design apart with an eminently crafted visual strategy.

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This post was originally published on the OpenGeeksLab blog.

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