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:
The Rise of Retro MinimalismWe all know how visual trends usually catch fire:
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 MattersThis movement is a middle finger to the notion that designers and developers are separate species. It's about the makers who:
The Building BlocksLet's break down what makes retro minimalism work: 1. Monospaced Typography
2. High Contrast
3. Dithered Renderings
Examples of Doing it RightHere's who's doing it right:
Together with DovetailUnlock the Future of Customer Insights Now Struggling to keep up with customer needs? The old ways—manual data analysis, repetitive research—are out. It’s time to upgrade your process. Dovetail’s new Customer Insights Hub helps you:
Ready to build products that truly resonate with your customers? Start now. The Tools of the TradeMonospace Typography: The FoundationMonospace 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 EffectsDithering, 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 LineRetro 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. Enjoying this newsletter? Let us know here. |
Practical lessons, resources, and news for the UX/UI community. Learn the real-world skills, methods, and tools that help you build user-first experiences. We make resources like practical tutorials, the Design Tools Survey, the Design Tools Database, and UX Challenges. Join 60k+ other designers and sign up for the newsletter to get product design mastery in just 5 minutes a week.
Welcome back. I'm 35,000 feet in the air right now, and I'm convinced I was built to thrive in a pod in space. But I can't do much reflecting on the year, because during our This Week in Design livestream, someone said "what you say is what you get" and I can't stop thinking about what it means for software interfaces. It's clear that our tools are changing. What's less clear is how. But I have some ideas. And thanks to thousands of you, we'll have more data points from this year's Design...
Welcome back. As we close out 2024, everyone's asking the same questions: "Will AI replace designers?" "Should I pivot careers?" "What skills do I need for 2025?" But only one of those questions is actually within our control—how we choose to educate ourselves. Today, we're talking about something that matters more than ever: continuous learning in a new era of rapid change. —Tommy (@DesignerTom) The Wireframe: Why the future belongs to perpetual learners The "Just-in-Time Learning" framework...
Welcome back. This week, I'm writing you from northern Colorado, but that's not stopping me from identifying a new visual design trend, going live this Friday, and teaming up with Ridd to bring you Figma Academy 2.0 for free (until Friday). As we round out the year, I'm looking for some of the best courses to recommend to designers heading into 2025. Shoot me a message if you've got one in mind. —Tommy (@DesignerTom) The Wireframe: The truth about navigation patterns Four patterns that drive...