Mobile design

The Modular Venice is a triple-stacked steel framed addition to Siegal’s existing 1920’s Venice bungalow home. Craned in over the existing home and installed in one day, the 560 sf modular addition uses a diagrid structural system wrapped in Polycarbonate panels to maximize light, energy and efficiency. Designed as a prototype for future residential infill projects, V.V3 introduces less material waste, faster construction time, a tighter building envelope, green finishes and higher insulating properties resulting in a lower total life-cycle cost of the home.

P3250012.jpg

10 Mobile App Designs for User Experience Inspiration

The interface need not be flashy, just the basics the user often looks for

Images on top of artists

arles

arles 3

Clicking each category leads you to more information. However, it does not give too much, just enough overview to let users know what they are. Even the information for each artist and exhibit doesn’t overload on they whys and whats, just a few sentences to help your users decide whether they want to see it or not.

arles1

Eda.ua – Food Delivery iPhone App

This mobile design version for an existing website is designed by a group of designers from the Ukraine. The app has both an iOS and Android version with a very friendly UI designed especially for the food delivery business.

Edu.ua implements all the functionality of the food delivery service in Ukraine

In order to meet usability standards, the designers conducted intensive market research and took note of various offbeat ideas. Then, they created and tested an interactive prototype with over 100 wireframes to ensure that the app design meets the needs of the client’s business.

eda 2

eda 3

To make it much easier to order food, users are guided into 5 easy steps which include: searching restaurants around the city, checking their menu, looking more specifically into the dishes before placing the order, confirming their order and proceeding with payment and delivery options.

eda 3

eda4

With these steps, the users are saved the hassle of worrying what type of dish they ordered and the ingredients that go into each dish. This is especially helpful for those who have some specific dietary requirements.

OMD & Frank Lloyd Wright Taliesin Modular

Over 100 years ago Frank Lloyd Wright launched a pioneering scheme to build prefabricated homes with pre-cut framing, cabinets and other factory-made parts. Based on building practices he’d seen in Japan, Wright called it the American System of housing. World War I intruded, and he built only a handful. Honoring Wright’s legacy while tackling important design issues of today, the Taliesin Mod.Fab is an example of simple, elegant, and sustainable living in the desert. The one-bedroom, 600-square- foot prototype residence relies on SIP (structural insulated panel) construction to allow for speed and economy on site or in a factory. It can be connected to utilities or be "unplugged"; relying on low-consumption fixtures, rainwater harvesting, greywater re-use, natural ventilation, solar orientation, and photovoltaics to reduce energy and water use. The structure is dimensioned and engineered to be transportable via roadway. The building sits cantilevered over the desert wash and is used as a guesthouse for visiting scholars.

The Taliesin Mod.Fab was designed and built by graduate and undergraduate students at the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture with faculty guidance and an emphasis on prefabricated construction by Jennifer Siegal. The structure can be visited on the student-led Taliesin West Desert Shelter Tour.

taliesinmodfab08longnight.jpg

taliesinmodfab09breeze.jpg

taliesinmodfab04panels.jpg

taliesinmodfab07deckwash.jpg

taliesinmodfab06deck.jpg

taliesinmodfab02kitchen.jpg

taliesinmodfab05bed.jpg

Big Bear- A Frame Modular

Big Bear_Render 3.jpg

Big Bear_Render 2.jpg

Big Bear_Render 4.jpg

Big Bear_Render 5.jpg

IMG_3390 (1).jpg

Sources:

https://1stwebdesigner.com/mobile-apps-designs/
http://www.designmobile.com/
https://designshack.net/articles/inspiration/mobile-app-templates/
Mobile design

Here’s how it works: When you pay more, the prize for the winning designer is bigger, too. More experienced designers participate in your contest, so you get more high-quality designs to choose from. More options means additional time that’s needed to review your designs. That’s why our Gold and Platinum packages offer dedicated managers to help streamline that process by writing creative briefs and giving your designers feedback.

toledo_sherman-25.jpg

Mobile app design made easy

Wanna take your brand everywhere? Go mobile. With a custom-designed app, your business goes wherever your customers go—all in the palm of their hand. Start a Design Contest and our designers will create an app you’ll love, guaranteed.

Logo design for Kloud ID by bartollo

Logo design for Blink Pocket by deiner

Logo design for MSFE by B3rto

Logo design for A game by Cody Sanfilippo

Logo design for Drivewise by akawizzard

Logo design for K-10 Mail by Chris Moon

Logo design for MangoMonkey by Norvz

OMD & Frank Lloyd Wright Taliesin Modular

Over 100 years ago Frank Lloyd Wright launched a pioneering scheme to build prefabricated homes with pre-cut framing, cabinets and other factory-made parts. Based on building practices he’d seen in Japan, Wright called it the American System of housing. World War I intruded, and he built only a handful. Honoring Wright’s legacy while tackling important design issues of today, the Taliesin Mod.Fab is an example of simple, elegant, and sustainable living in the desert. The one-bedroom, 600-square- foot prototype residence relies on SIP (structural insulated panel) construction to allow for speed and economy on site or in a factory. It can be connected to utilities or be "unplugged"; relying on low-consumption fixtures, rainwater harvesting, greywater re-use, natural ventilation, solar orientation, and photovoltaics to reduce energy and water use. The structure is dimensioned and engineered to be transportable via roadway. The building sits cantilevered over the desert wash and is used as a guesthouse for visiting scholars.

The Taliesin Mod.Fab was designed and built by graduate and undergraduate students at the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture with faculty guidance and an emphasis on prefabricated construction by Jennifer Siegal. The structure can be visited on the student-led Taliesin West Desert Shelter Tour.

taliesinmodfab08longnight.jpg

taliesinmodfab09breeze.jpg

taliesinmodfab04panels.jpg

taliesinmodfab07deckwash.jpg

taliesinmodfab06deck.jpg

taliesinmodfab02kitchen.jpg

taliesinmodfab05bed.jpg

Big Bear- A Frame Modular

Big Bear_Render 3.jpg

Big Bear_Render 2.jpg

Big Bear_Render 4.jpg

Big Bear_Render 5.jpg

IMG_3390 (1).jpg

Summary

Breadcrumbs are a secondary form of navigation that assists users in getting to content nearby in the hierarchical structure. They are especially useful when users arrive to the site through an external link and don’t start with the homepage. Ensure that all items in the breadcrumb trail are links and that each individual node gets more specific as you progress down into the site. On mobile, breadcrumbs can take up too much space or can be hard to tap; consider shortening the breadcrumb trail if your users’ tasks allow it.

Page Laubheimer is a Senior User Experience Specialist with Nielsen Norman Group. He helps organizations focus on delivering outstanding user experience in order to achieve their strategic goals. He combines his expertise in website usability with experience managing a team of designers and developers to successfully implement UX best practices across a range of platforms.

Sources:

https://99designs.com/mobile-app-design
http://www.designmobile.com/
https://www.nngroup.com/articles/breadcrumbs/
Mobile design

This Android app template will allow you to create a complete food ordering app for your restaurant or cafe. In fact, you can even use it to add a food ordering system to your other service-based apps as well.

adforest app

Guidelines for Using Breadcrumbs on Desktop

Breadcrumbs are intended to supplement other navigational components, such as a global navigation bar that stretches across the top of every page or a local navigation bar that is often found on the left hand side. Breadcrumbs augment but do not replace those main forms of navigation.

Breadcrumbs are not intended to show the history of pages traversed during a session on the site (a la a browser’s native Back button); they are intended to show the hierarchical structure of the site. We’ve noted this for many years, but it still bears repeating; attempting to show a list of the pages a user has accessed, in order, will quickly become long and confusing, with a lot of repetition, and won’t provide any benefit for users who arrive on a deep page directly from an external link, which is one of the key uses of breadcrumbs.

Breadcrumbs pose an inherent tension with polyhierarchical sites (in which a page has more than one parent). In such situations, we do not recommend showing two or more breadcrumb trails reflecting the different paths in the polyhierarchy, because they will confuse users and take a lot of space at the top of the page.

If a page has multiple different parents, identify a canonical path to it in the site hierarchy and show that path in the breadcrumb trail. Don’t attempt to personalize the breadcrumb trail so that it will reflect each user’s individual path within the site hierarchy, because you will end up sending mixed signals to search engines. And you will still need to designate one path in the hierarchy as the primary trail for those visitors coming from an external link.

You should never have a link that does nothing. The last breadcrumb (denoting the current page) should not be a link. To avoid confusing users, visually differentiate between the current page and the preceding linked breadcrumb items, preferably using underlined or blue text.

Each node in the breadcrumb trail should be a link to an ancestor page (with the important exception of the link corresponding to the current page, as noted above). If some of the subcategory labels in the global navigation don’t have a separate page dedicated to them do not include these subcategories in the breadcrumb trail.

For sites with flat hierarchies with only 1 or 2 levels of categories, a breadcrumb isn’t needed as a wayfinding device. In this case, consider clearly indicating the top-level section or the category that the page lives within.

Website with a flat hierarchy that doesn

MIT’s main website has a flat hierarchy, with only 1 page in each section. While it features a breadcrumb at the top of the page, this breadcrumb isn’t necessary. In the main navigation, the location of the page is highlighted.

Much like our guidelines for global navigation, links to the homepage (labeled Home) are still necessary. However, note that duplicating the Home link in both the global navigation and the breadcrumb trail is not recommended — one or the other is fine.

Breadcrumb including a home link in both the navigation and breadcrumb

The Oregon state government website includes a breadcrumb trail, but omits a link to the homepage. However, in this case this is acceptable, as the site also includes a Home link in the global navigation — duplicating that homepage link is not necessary, but it does need to be shown in one of the two places.

Sources:

https://designshack.net/articles/inspiration/android-app-templates/
https://www.nngroup.com/articles/breadcrumbs/
https://designshack.net/articles/inspiration/android-app-templates/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *