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by bryanrasmussen 750 days ago
I personally like the look of this kind of thing enough I would want to use it for a real product, or maybe for the beta version of the product and then switch it up when official release.

Probably too much extra work though.

2 comments

Early in my design career, I ran a user test of a lo-fi prototype with some members of a customer success team, the visual presentation intended to convey the mutability of what we were presenting. I got a comment that “the sketch look was really nice” and since then have never relied on that as a signifier of where a concept was in the design process.
There's good reason to use it for a beta build (or an alpha) - it changes the type of feedback you get.

While my google-fu is failing me as I write this, there was a blog post I read long ago about a making things look not done (I want to say it was in the context of an AWT look and feel). Related: xkcd-style Plots https://mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/11350/xkcd-s... ( https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4597977 ) and https://www.chrisstucchio.com/blog/2014/why_xkcd_style_graph...

If the product looks done then the feedback you will get assumes that it is done.

I made the mistake of using a nice looking header (it looked better than the existing ones that were used which were stretched gifs and I had a CSS gradient) while working on the innards of some JavaScript. While I was trying to get feedback on the "is this workflow the right sequence of pages? Are these the UI elements that need to be on the page for this functionality? For that matter, am I missing some functionality?" .... and I got feedback about the color blue and if it should go from dark to light or light to dark in the gradient.

...

And with some digging I remembered the look and feel - https://napkinlaf.sourceforge.net

Which has the links to the blog post:

Don't make the Demo look Done - https://headrush.typepad.com/creating_passionate_users/2006/...

Check out Bill Buxton's work, he wrote a lot about this: https://www.billbuxton.com/