Outside of typography, concepting is an excellent still to have in your arsenal. I’d like to think that as graphic designers we do more than just decorate to make something “look cool.” Everything should be visually appealing, minimum.
When I see designs that have random elements, I wonder about the designer’s process. Why did they use thick or thin lines? How did they come up with the color palette? These are all things that are easily solved when you have a concept. The example I’m using below isn’t a full redesign, but instead applying a concept to a design. Let’s dive in.
1. What Is a Concept
I love my Leica Q. One of my favorite buildings is the Leica Headquarters in Weltzar, Germany. The building is designed in the shape of a camera film reel.
2. Benefits of a Concept
This is a site that I designed last year for lung cancer patients.
3. How I Come up With Concepts
From here, I grouped similar ideas to come up with a more succinct idea.
My final concept:
A morning routine that feels calm with a human feeling.
4. Showing Things Visually
5. Choosing Elements to Work With
Some reasoning behind my decisions: I liked the gradient of the morning skies. I directly pulled from them to create the color palette. For the pattern, I liked the thin lines since they felt light and simple. I decided on the wavy lines because they reminded me of fingerprints. I also rounded the corners of tile elements to match the rounded font being used.
6. Applying the Concept
As I mentioned earlier, the site performed extremely well in the first year. For the redesign, I wanted to keep most aspects of the original and only make subtle changes. I applied the elements to the site.
It made sense to have a different color to denote each section. When I looked at the landing pages, I thought the gradient itself was too overpowering and it felt a little flat. I overlayed the fingerprint-like lines on top to soften and give some texture to them.
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