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3 Web Design Trends in 2016 that You Should Be Careful About
Like every trend, web design trend always comes and goes. Therefore, if you are web designer keeping up to date is the best solution to stay successful in this industry, so you can understand what is good and what is bad for your design. Below are 3 web design trends that you shouldn’t use in 2016, you can read this material to avoid you from any harmful mistake.
- Complex Typography
You may find that having more multiple typefaces is a good idea, while the fact is that sometimes using more than two multiple typefaces in your website will create a confusing and cluttered looking site, which reduces legibility and readability. However, at some point you still can use more than two typefaces in order to get a good effect.
In addition, another important point that you should remember related with fronts is about its spacing. A good spacing will work well for clarity. Below are some more tips related with typography that you can use:
- Experiment with fonts. Aim for clean and clear presentation that also reflects the brand’s visual style.
- Use fonts and typefaces that complement each other or are contrast enough to provide interesting color. In addition, you need to allow for psychological level when selecting the font/typeface as believe it or not certain color and certain type of typography will bring different emotions and feelings, for instance, a serif brings an air of formality, a sans-serif feels reliable and a script can be haughty.
- Put Everything Under a Hamburger Menu
In order to simplifying the navigation, designers keep hiding all of icon under a hamburger menu whether it is in desktop or in mobile devices. It is understandable that many designers will prefer to hide it under the hamburger menu just to make your site cleaner and sleeker. However, this also increases the risk of discoverability.
- Parallax Scrolling
Recently, parallax scrolling is one of the most favorable sites that allow the foreground and background content to scroll at different speeds which cause an illusion of depth. However, it is still debatable if it produces a good UX.
- Bad for SEO
Since having parallax scrolling in your page will result in one page optimization, so search engines will only have a little way of content that can be crawled by the search engines. This is especially true as text tends to be embedded in graphics.
- Can Reduce Performance
Moreover, due to its heavy use of graphics and JavaScript, the page will require longer time to load the image and this will cause more trouble for mobile users.
- Can Affect Users Negatively
Some people may find that parallax site is more fun than the non-parallax sites, but some other people experience a motion sickness and significant usability issues toward parallax sites.