Web Design Trends for 2010
With a new year on the horizon, it’s time to pack away the old, worn web designs and prepare for the brave, new face of tomorrow. Although trends don’t start and stop on January 1st, there is a definite shift from what we craved at the beginning of the year to what we are seeking tutorials for at the end of the year. Most of the time, this shift is subtle. It’s a perfection or re-interpretation of a currently hot trend. Trends help us evolve as designers. As we master the skills of design aesthetic, we continue to push forward to what’s next or what needs to be fully discovered.
Make no mistake about it, you will recognize the ideas behind these trends. Although this list isn’t a drastic departure from what was popular in 2009, it marks different trends that will be expanded upon and made better as a result. As you think of how you will incorporate new trends into your designs, focus on the main idea of each trend. Be encouraged to dabble into these trends so that you become part of the movement.
1. Oversized Logos/ Headers
Splash pages are so yesterday. To make an unforgettable impression on the visitor, the trend for 2010 will be oversized logos on an equally oversized header. These types of headers can take up the entire screen, but with one important note. Visitors will not need to click anything, just scroll down. Visitors often having a clicking phobia (due to years of poor navigation), so big headers do the job of a splash page without forcing your visitors to click anything.
Main Idea: Huge headers that make your visitors remember you.
2. Sketch/ Hand-drawn Design
Hand-drawn design is not exactly new on the horizon, but we all know that it is still on the fringes of web design. Many designers admire the style but are afraid to create their own sketches because of the “I can’t really draw” attitude. If you look at the most popular hand-drawn websites (and relative to other types of trends, there are only a few), you will notice that most of your fellow designers can’t draw. These designs are not exactly headed to an art museum, but they do convey a sense of whimsy, and blur the line between cold web and personal interaction– the ultimate goal of the internet. If you can doodle, you can sketch for web design.
Sketch in 2010 will become more elemental, and not as much the main focus of a web design. It will be used to personalize standard web copy in new and exciting ways.
Main Idea: Sketch becomes an elemental part of corporate design.
3. Slab Typefaces
Slab typefaces are relatively new, although they’ve been around for over 200 years in traditional media. To get a good visual definition of slab typefaces, think of the old Wild West “Wanted” posters. Those bold letters are slab typefaces. Slab typeface is commonly all capital letters and are bold and imposing. Many designers have shied away from slab typefaces in the past because logos and headers were smaller and more understated. However, combined with the trend toward larger headers, slab typefaces demand the reader to take notice.
Main Idea: Slab typefaces is used to bravely express who you are.
4. Typography
Typography is one of the most difficult trends to tackle which is why it will remain fresh in 2010. With all the cries for usability, web designers are afraid of using new and different fonts. The idea of mixing varying font sizes together is completely unthinkable. Fonts are meant to be explored, twisted, and molded to fit your purposes. With the correct placement, a website that utilizes Typography as its main design element will be more interesting to a reader than overloading the same site with tons of photos.
Main Idea: Typography is young, but will continue to be a part of web design.
5. One Page Layouts
One pay layouts challenge you to edit away what’s unnecessary. In 2010, this trend will move away from the quirky navigation and become more minimal in its approach. Think of these websites as business cards. These websites will be more of a one-stop-shop for how to locate you and your work on various other sites– your blog and your social media hangouts.
Main Idea: One page layouts will be more about personal profiles and less corporate.
6. Huge Images
A close relative to the oversized logo/ header, the huge image does much the same thing. It creates an visual impact that the visitor won’t soon forget. Unlike the oversized header from above, huge images are not part of the site’s branding. Instead, these images draw the visitor into your site, if not for their content then for their humongous size. In 2010, web designers will find themselves more comfortable using these big statements in their design to convey the site’s tone.
Main Idea: Huge images will be used to invite visitors in.
7. Change of Perspective
As we’ve discussed before, the desktop perspective has been done to death. 2010 will see a definite change in perspective to a more realistic view. There may also be a move toward side-shot aerial.
Main Idea: 2010 will play around with different perspectives.
8. Interactive/ Intuitive Design
Flash has seen better days. There was a time when you couldn’t visit a website without running into an annoying Flash interface. These days Flash is a lot more relaxed and much more professional. Although some designers prefer jQuery for forms and popups, Flash still has its place in design, especially when done subtly. Flash still has no equal to its interactivity. In 2010, web designers will move toward the more redeeming elements of Flash. Because the average visitor is more web savvy these days, designers will also create sites that are slightly more intuitive than in the past.
Main Idea: Interactive design will make a come-back.
9. Modal Boxes
Modal boxes are a trend that’s picking up steam and will be virtually everywhere in 2010. A modal box is like the popup’s more sophisticated older brother– it’s smooth, good looking and popular. Modal boxes are so easy to design and easy to use, making them the perfect solution for any designer concerned with usability.
Main Idea: Modal boxes will continue to pop up in 2010 designs.
10. Minimalism
Forget the old school minimal websites. Websites of 2010 will continue to feature lots of white space but with bold typology and surprising color schemes. Not all minimal websites will agree with the notion of black and white simplicity. Although minimalism is by nature muted, it will also showcase fresh colors. Minimalism isn’t cold, it’s warm and too the point.
Main Idea: Minimalism will venture into typology.
11. Oversized Footer
Oversized footers may be everywhere already, but 2010 will find them even more exaggerated. The footers of tomorrow will be less of an after-thought and more of an integral part of the design. Look for footers that feature contain random information, such as feed updates from various social media, daily polls, and Flickr feeds.
Main Idea: Oversized Footers will feature less important, but more personal information.
12. Retro
Retro designs are here to stay. Although a lot of the design community admires retro web design, it can be difficult to fully embrace this style without coming across “undone.” The key to retro designs is to be inspired by its tone and underlying playfulness. In 2010, retro design will be expanded as designers find new ways to honor vintage art.
Main Idea: Retro is new.
13. Intro Boxes
“Hi, my name is…” will find an even bigger stage in 2010 as designers recognize the beautiful simplicity of introducing yourself to your visitor. If you’re struggling with making a creative “About” page, the intro box will be your best bet. It forces you to condense who you are into a relatively small about of space. In 2010, intro boxes will push its own boundaries. Instead of the boring hello, designers will find new pick-up lines. And, instead of the left-flanked intro block, 2010 will see boxes in unusual placement, perhaps even in the middle of a page.
Main Idea: New ways to say “hello.”
14. Magazine Layouts
As more and more people migrate from the comforts of traditional press to online infotainment, designers are challenged to welcome them in with an easy transition. There is a move toward the magazine layout, where information is carefully organized on a single home page, giving the visitor an opportunity to explore as interested. The familiar layout will appeal to appeal to anyone who’s ever read a magazine or newspaper, but it will also be easier to use– no flipping pages! In 2010, magazine layout will become very huge for blogs in particular.
Main Idea: Magazine layouts will be used for infotainment sites.
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198 comments
TampaWebDesign
January 6, 2010Clean, bright design with good use of white space should be the new standard. Minimalist design with use of fonts as design itself. Mobile smart phone usage set to explode ie Google HTC Nexus. Tampa Web Design
Robert Dall
January 7, 2010With shear number of websites having passwords and programs like 1password gaining wide spread usage. I have found problems with the Modal Boxes sign in and the 1password programs.
I hope solutions are found, I don’t mind the design but the functionally is a little left to be desired. . .
Robert Dall
Robert Dall.com
Aaron Kato
January 8, 2010Hey, this predict was a brilliant inspiration for me! Thank you!
Suchi Gupta
January 11, 2010Great post! A lot of food for thought and ideas.
Thanks for sharing
drew lyon
January 15, 2010Great list. I incorporated super big header because who doesn’t like to see their name take up the entire window.
Nathan
January 16, 2010man love this post – good info – #8 is a good example of why i dislike flash- makes site slow and thus boring! lot of time wasted on too little info – sorry !
Madalina Iordache-Levay
January 16, 2010These are beautiful examples and I found some of them very inspiring, but I am not convinced about the trends nominated. To exemplify a trend you need more then one example. This article needs more arguments, analysis and examples to justify why the author believes these will be trends in 2010.
Anders G
January 18, 2010I agree, Madalina. I was expecting something more analytical, but this was a good and inspiring article nonetheless.
As for the trends, believe (and hope) Web Typography is going to reach some new heights in 2010.
Another thing I think we will see is more integration with handhelds, just as TampaWebDesign suggests.
mxky
January 19, 2010Some very inspiring and stunning ideas, thank you very much for sharing. I love the retro one! #12
knhGraphicArtist
January 19, 2010Perfect inspiration to read/view during a morning coffee buzz.
tejas
January 28, 2010I am hoping to see a lot of differently style blog posts in form of blogzines, which closely resemble the print designs. It is saddening to see that the designer’s creativity (at least for their own blogs/sites) getting limited to a single template, however meticulously designed.
We use different blog post designs on our blog at http://www.whitehatsweb.com/blog inspired by print designs. You should check it out – I think our pet pull quotes are going to become a rage soon.
oddFrogg
February 1, 2010Great article. Really good information. I can see how each style appeals to a certain audience. Numbers 14, 6, 10 and 4 speak to me.
sbuster
February 6, 2010Exelente post!
Feri Fras
February 8, 2010Great Post… Yay! Your predict 78% same with me. Minimalism, Black and White, Typography. But I didn’t think about Over Sized Header and Footer….
I think you’ll be true about it!
(sory for my bad English)
Digikraf
February 9, 2010Great article. INSPIRATIONAL
Tommy Kreuziger
February 11, 2010I’ve been reading a few posts and really and enjoy your writing. I’m just starting up my own nintendo game blog and only hope that I can write as well and give the reader so much insight.
damo
February 15, 2010Great article
Just a note the links on #11 for websites need to be swapped… they link to the wrong websites.
LenHend
February 16, 2010I wish everything else i need to know was as straight forward as your information you have displayed here – thanks
Imokon
February 16, 2010I agree with everything except Flash. jQuery, Mootools as well as CSS3 are evolving and reaching new levels of quality and ‘interactivity’. Flash will die out for many reasons – including the fact that it is a monopoly, and that it still hurts people visiting from areas with lower bandwidth and those on 3G (as we will be using our pc’s less and less). Flash is too bulky and slow. When IE6 is dead, all will be well for everyone as far as ‘pretty’ goes. the only time I use Flash lately is for sIFR, and thats temporary till CSS3 is more mainstream for corporate clients.
Grafix Studio
February 19, 2010Very refreshing. Everything seems to be moving forward to larger elements which focus the attention. Goodbye to crammed web design…goodbye eyeglasses!
technology articles
February 22, 2010I am looking for some design idea for my ads website. Thanks for posting the informative articles
Lori
February 22, 2010I love the effect that cahnging the perspective of images has on the target audience. It gives you the idea that you are involved in the website. Give a feeling of whats more important.
I loved it
Kioti
February 22, 2010Great article! This is going to help me out.
Beans
February 22, 2010i like the oversized footers because it changes the height of the site and can be made larger to make the text and content centered vertically
Ognjen Dujakovic
February 23, 2010Very moving and refreshing. A lot of things seem to be moving forward to eye focused elements to draw maximum attention on great design. Goodbye boring web design and welcome new, shiny and full of ideas web design !
techieglue
February 28, 2010Great info, it will surely help me out in building my site. Please keep on giving such type of posts and a lot of thanks.
Today Designers
March 10, 2010Great info! Always design by discovery!
Miho
March 14, 2010Thank you!
Great article.
Monolith Multimedia
March 17, 2010I really hope flash doesnt make a significant comeback. There is a fair amount of it today, and most of it is starting to be used less annoyingly. but if it becomes the new black again i fear many annoying headers/UI to come
JJ Nold
March 17, 2010I don’t agree with some of these speculations. While I do believe that design principles as a whole will always evolve and continue to push the bounds of what is unique design; I think that with the release of the iPad and IE9, we will see a migration away from Flash based elements and see more people placing emphasis on jQuery, HTML5 and CSS3 for interactive elements.
Web Design Expert
March 18, 2010Good read. Good suggestions for blogs and personal websites, however none of suggestions would work with ecommerce websites.
Waldo
March 23, 2010Very resourceful. Your post have given me some good inspiration for my own portfolio. Thanks!
Amrita
March 31, 2010Informative and exciting! The huge headers, use of typography and change of perspective are very inspiring. Love where this is heading!
Wetwilly
April 2, 2010No but seriously? Are you kidding? Typography a 2010 trend? Minimalism a 2010 trend? Please study your topics before writing on it. The bauhaus talked about rationality in the early 20′s.
This is by far the most stupid crap i’ve read for a real long time. Please DO NOT talk about what you don’t know.
panda
April 3, 2010niceee
Alex Rosario
April 8, 2010bookmarked
Andrea Norman
April 13, 2010Wonderful summary of examples of coming trends in web design. Thanks for sharing.
Nick Davies
April 14, 2010As much as you make a good case, I disagree with your theory of Oversized Logos/ Headers. Users aren’t afraid to click, (granted, we all hate bad navigation) to find what they want. But as for the scrolling….If I walk into a supermarket looking only for soup, then I want to be able to look for the aisle sign that says soup. I don’t want to have to troll every single aisle looking for the soup. I do agree that the “splash page” has died or should die as soon as possible, but good upfront navigation will never be missed.
Mike Teare
April 21, 2010Some interesting food for thought there and all nicely packaged on one page. Thanks for that.
Mike
April 23, 2010Excellent article. Soooo needed right now.
Libby Gundert
April 27, 2010Very good text. I’ve found your site via Yahoo and I’m really happy about the information you provide in your articles. Btw your sites layout is really messed up on the Kmelon browser. Would be really great if you could fix that. Anyhow keep up the great work!
Giuseppe
April 27, 2010Very nice article, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Dene-Paul Elliott
April 28, 2010Great article – well worth the read – some very interesting and very practical ideas
JADE CLOWARD
April 29, 2010Love the recap or reminder of keep-it-simple-stupid. Magazine/clean/white-space layouts are here. Homepages should be informative, attractive & easily navigated. These types of elements should get peope to come back to your site! *Visit us at http://clowarddesign.com Thanks. ~ Jade Cloward (Web/SEO Designer)
Alex Grande
May 9, 2010I think we have incorporated some of the trends for 2010 in our mobile agency homepage – http://www.wearepharaoh.com/.
Great post! Thanks!
Asha
May 10, 2010Cool. Thanks for posting
brenda
May 11, 2010great job, girl! thanks for this excellent resource. i’m really gonna take your advice to heart cuz boy my website needs help!!
Website Design
May 12, 2010Sounds very similar to smashingmagazine trends for 2009?
2010 is all about transparencies in design
…also like your tip about perspective in design. 3d elements are great!
Web Design
May 13, 2010Excellent article!… I’m enjoying reading it… Thanks…
Nikita
May 16, 2010Great article! Very well-structured. Here you can find Logo Design Trends 2010 http://limejam.tumblr.com/post/600512350/logo-design-trends-2010
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