With few exceptions, any website UI worth its salt should contain two fundamental element types at its core:
1. Visual elements (images, colors, etc.)
2. Textual elements (fonts, etc.)
But how do you balance the two?
Of course, you can spend day-in and day-out reading articles and watching tutorials on the topic to get a better sense of what meshes well aesthetically and what doesn't.
But at the end of the day, you have to be willing to try out dozens - if not hundreds - of visual and textual element combinations before landing exactly where you want to be.
Yes, this entails a substantial investment of time and effort on the part of you, the designer. But once you get there, you can rest easy knowing that you haven't used predetermined templates concocted by other people, or by AI.
You'll have created a fusion of images, colors and fonts that stand the test of time - all while looking completely unique. And how did you get there?
By embracing trial and error. That's how.
1. Visual elements (images, colors, etc.)
2. Textual elements (fonts, etc.)
But how do you balance the two?
Of course, you can spend day-in and day-out reading articles and watching tutorials on the topic to get a better sense of what meshes well aesthetically and what doesn't.
But at the end of the day, you have to be willing to try out dozens - if not hundreds - of visual and textual element combinations before landing exactly where you want to be.
Yes, this entails a substantial investment of time and effort on the part of you, the designer. But once you get there, you can rest easy knowing that you haven't used predetermined templates concocted by other people, or by AI.
You'll have created a fusion of images, colors and fonts that stand the test of time - all while looking completely unique. And how did you get there?
By embracing trial and error. That's how.