Designing truth‍
‍Accessibility is (finally) key‍
Content gets its due in web and UX design‍
Inclusivity is key‍
The no-code revolution has arrived‍
The rise of the visual developer‍
Design has its seat at the table. Now what?‍
Role is not identity‍
Okay, one visual trend: Marquee is back, baby!

Each year, I share my take on the web design trends that will shape the coming year, often incorporating the opinions of my fellow designers at Webflow, as well as those of well-known names in the broader design community. I’ve always included a mix of concrete design details and interaction models as well as higher-level concepts, which helped fill out my self-imposed constraint of adding one more trend than the number of the year (19 web design trends for 2018, for example).
This year, I’m breaking the mold.
Because 2020 is going to be a different year for web design, to my mind. A year when we’re all going to focus a little less on this layout, that color scheme, and whichever nifty animation mode caught our eye last week, and instead consider the deeper underlying concerns of design.
So I’m ditching the same ole design specifics we see year after year (broken grids, anyone?!) to focus on the bigger picture. To ask far more significant questions like:
How do we design to make information clear, while still making it easily consumable?
How do we make design universal, ensuring that no one feels excluded or erased by our decisions?
And, perhaps most significantly, how will a new generation of tools, built upon a paradigm that’s simultaneously brand-new, yet old as spreadsheets, change not only the way we work, but also what we produce?
Source: https://webflow.com/blog/web-design-trends-for-2020

#web #design #trends

9 meaningful web design trends for 2020 | Webflow Blog
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