Rise of a visual design trend: retro-minimalism


Welcome back. If you've been following top design engineers lately, you've probably noticed a rising wave of what I'm calling "retro minimalism" - an intoxicating mashup of dithering, monospace typefaces, and brutalist design principles that's creating some dope visual styles.

Let's dive into why I think this is more than a trend and how you can start playing with it in your work.

—Tommy (@DesignerTom)


The Wireframe:

  • Why retro minimalism matters
  • Examples of retro minimalism
  • How to implement it in your work

The Rise of Retro Minimalism

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We all know how visual trends usually catch fire:

  1. They look different enough to stand out
  2. They're championed by people who do great work
  3. They tap into something deeper than aesthetics

But what's happening with retro minimalism feels different. This isn't your typical Dribbble-bait gradient with rounded corners.

This is a love letter to the intersection of design and code, pushed forward by some of the heaviest hitters in product design right now (e.g. EvilRabbit at Vercel and Jordan Singer at Mainframe) - people who aren't just designing interfaces but building the tools that shape our industry.

When these folks start playing with dithering and monospace, others pay attention.

Why This Matters

This movement is a middle finger to the notion that designers and developers are separate species. It's about the makers who:

  • Live in both Figma and VS Code
  • Let their execution speak louder than their words
  • Understand that constraints breed creativity

The Building Blocks

Let's break down what makes retro minimalism work:

1. Monospaced Typography

  • Creates rhythm through rigid structure
  • Forces intentional hierarchy
  • Signals technical authenticity

2. High Contrast

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  • Improves readability
  • Creates dramatic visual impact
  • Simplifies decision-making

3. Dithered Renderings

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  • Adds texture without complexity
  • Creates depth through constraint
  • Callbacks to early pixel art and CRTs

Examples of Doing it Right

Here's who's doing it right:


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The Tools of the Trade

Monospace Typography: The Foundation

Monospace typefaces, where each character occupies the same width, are deeply rooted in technical history.

Originally designed for typewriters and early computers, they create a distinct rhythm and immediate technical authenticity.

In interfaces, they work brilliantly for code blocks, technical information, and creating visual hierarchy through their rigid structure. They fall flat when overused in body copy or when you need to maximize space efficiency.

Some monospace typefaces you can use:

Implementing Dithering & Retro Effects

Dithering, the art of using controlled noise to create the illusion of additional colors or shades, is having a moment. You can introduce these effects into your work through two main approaches:

Standard Design Tools:

Code Implementation:

The Bottom Line

Retro minimalism is a callback to the nostalgia of 8-bit pixel games, CRT monitors, and an era when anyone creating digital work was at least an accidental pioneer of ideas.

As we head into 2025, expect to see more of this aesthetic, not because it's trendy, but because it represents something real: a return to intentional constraints and technical authenticity in an era when the barrier to shipping your own ideas is lower than ever.

"The computer can't tell you the emotional story. It can give you the exact mathematical design, but what's missing is the eyebrows." - Frank Zappa, 1979

See you next week,

Tommy


Thanks for reading! What's your favorite visual style? Hit reply and let me know.

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UX Tools

UX Tools is a weekly deep dive into the tools and trends shaping how we build products. Each week, Tommy (@DesignerTom) breaks down emerging tools, analyzes industry shifts, and shares practical insights drawn from 15+ years shipping products. Join 80k+ builders, makers and designers getting deep analysis and tool discoveries that help you build better products, faster.

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