Co-founders of Sketch shared their stance on AI: “We’re not ready to make a move with AI just yet — for reasons that will become clear. However, we wanted to share the principles that will guide our approach when that time comes.”
I respect their position on using AI to aid designers but never to create designs. To me, Make Design was the least exciting AI feature announced at Config, and I’m glad it was reframed as the First Draft during the relaunch a few weeks ago. Their focus on privacy and being local-first is a smart way to differentiate from Figma and offer something unique, even if that required burying Sketch Cloud first.
In the past, the file browser and the community files required different thumbnail aspect ratios. Now, it’s standardized at 16:9 across Figma files, FigJam, and Figma Slides.
Archive link without a paywall. A large profile in The New York Times of what Jony Ive and his studio LoveFrom have been up to in the last five years.
It’s a rare look behind the scenes at his interests and work, but this part caught me by surprise: “Mr. Ive and Mr. Altman met for dinner several more times before agreeing to build a product, with LoveFrom leading the design. They have raised money privately, with Mr. Ive and Emerson Collective, Ms. Powell Jobs’s company, contributing, and could raise up to $1 billion in start-up funding by the end of the year from tech investors. In February, Mr. Ive found office space for the company. They spent $60 million on a 32,000-square-foot building called the Little Fox Theater that backs up to the LoveFrom courtyard. He has hired about 10 employees, including Tang Tan, who oversaw iPhone product development, and Evans Hankey, who succeeded Mr. Ive in leading design at Apple.”
2Advanced relaunch wasn’t on my bingo card for 2024. One of the most influential websites of the early 2000s is back, this time rebuilt with Rive and React instead of Flash. It’s really cool to see it again.
Inga Hampton, Product Designer & Illustrator at Raycast, does pure sorcery in Figma.
The AI feature Make Designs is back under a new name, First Draft, which I greatly prefer as it sets more accurate expectations. (Curiously, that was the original internal project name.) “We’re also introducing some key updates, like letting you choose from one of four libraries depending on your needs — whether it’s a wireframing library to help you sketch out less opinionated, lo-fi primitives, or higher-fidelity libraries to provide more visual expressions or patterns to explore.”
I believe that wasn’t previously shared: “Our vision is for First Draft to extend beyond our current libraries and allow organizations to incorporate their own custom libraries. In the future, teams will be able to draft ideas using their company’s unique design language without having to sift through hundreds of components by hand.”
“Collaborative-design software maker Figma Inc. accused competitors of breaching a contract and copyright infringement by stealing its source code. Singapore-based Motiff Pte. Ltd., along with Chinese companies Yuanfudao HK Ltd. and Kanyun Holding Group Co., accessed Figma’s product under a subscription agreement and reverse engineered its copyrighted code for their own product in violation of Figma’s Master Subscription Agreement, according to a complaint filed Monday in the US District Court for the Northern District of California.“
The court document includes a fascinating list of examples.
This website does a great public service by classifying dark UI patterns, pointing to relevant international laws, and publicly shaming the biggest offenders: “Deceptive patterns (also known as “dark patterns”) are tricks used in websites and apps that make you do things that you didn’t mean to, like buying or signing up for something. […] We’ve collected over 400 examples in our hall of shame. The most commonly complained about companies are Google, Facebook, Amazon and LinkedIn.”
There are plenty of icon sets out there, but this one includes 3,198 free SVG icons for popular brands, which is pretty uncommon.
For those of us missing the good old days of iOS 6 and Corinthian leather: “Relive the golden era of skeuomorphic design with the Legacy iOS UI Kit.”
Jake made a plugin that brings the power of CSS color-mix() into Figma. Use it to generate swatches, variable ramps, and solid or gradient fills. I highly recommend watching Jake’s video if you’re unfamiliar with this CSS notation.
Maria Christopher from Uber, on the challenges of managing a growing design system: “Over time, we struggled with component redundancy and system inconsistency. The increasing complexity from the sheer amount of components, variants, and customizations began to undermine the effectiveness and integrity of our system. It turns out, we weren’t alone. This mirrors a broader trend in the design industry, where the focus is shifting towards critically evaluating and simplifying systems, rather than just adding more layers of complexity.”
I look forward to the next release of Supa Palette with support for OKLCH and reusable configs!
Ridd argues that the pendulum has swung too far, and designers hating on design systems are missing the point. You might not need an enterprise-grade system with all bells and whistles, but every product can benefit from a set of simple components: “I’ll suggest design systems are most valuable when you DON’T know what the product will be… Investing in a set of core components minimizes the number of knobs you need to turn in order to iterate.”
Fast Company on Figma’s rebrand: ”Today, the company is launching a refreshed visual identity that represents its growing, post-Adobe breakup ambitions to be, well, just about everything. Figma’s been making moves to expand beyond its founding idea of being being a single product company for designers, to a multi-product company for multi-role creative teams. Now, the company’s refreshed brand is catching up and speaking to an expanded audience that includes developers and supporting team members like project managers, who help bring a design deliverable to life.”
Olivia Hingley for It’s Nice That: “Sitting at the core of the concept is a new brand idea: ‘build by design’. Short and sweet, the idea reinstates that design is more than just a skill, department or process, it’s the “gravitational centre” of the brand. Three brand beliefs come from this idea: ‘design is everyone’s business’, which speaks to the flexibility and broad nature of design, while the second, ‘craft as a differentiator’, centers on the care and attention to detail that Figma propagates. […] And, the third and final belief is ‘the idea is just the beginning’.”
I love how Figma showcased the community work on a giant screen at Times Square.
A deep dive into Figma’s brand refresh. “Figma’s visual identity has gotten a bold refresh. From playful primitives to a vibrant new palette, we’re unveiling our latest brand evolution — one that speaks to all product builders.”
Zigma connects your design system to the production code, directly syncing design variables from Figma into your GitHub projects. Made by the NextUI team.
A new library of 514 modern handcrafted icons is available in two visual styles.