Post-Design Era
What Dribbble’s new direction means for the future of design
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We are entering a post-design era and Dribbble’s latest redesign is a testiment to that.
While most people talk about whether the new logo is better or worse, I prefer to look at it on a deeper level.
The logo doesn’t matter, what matters is what this change signifies.
Why this change? And why NOW?
My Dribbble Story
Dribbble used to be an exclusive club based on quality of work.
I got my Dribbble invite in 2012 and I remember that I went out to celebrate that day. It was big.
It seriously made my day and the first few years there uploading, interacting with other designers — it was pure magic.
Designing some real products (not just “dribbble shots”) often led to interesting discussions in the comments and some pretty good ideas.
The community vibe was huge!
The reputation
Over the years Dribbble has gotten a bad reputation among UX designers. To say something looks like a dribbble shot was used as an insult, like it’s eye-candy but worthless design.
And sure — there’s merit to that but Dribbble has also served as an amazing source of inspiration pushing the industry forward.
It’s there where most trends got started, it’s there where I noticed and named things like Neumorphism, Glassmorphism or Aurora and wrote those very first articles.
Many popular design trends and styles started on Dribbble