Art Deco
1920s-1940sA luxurious visual style featuring geometric patterns, bold symmetry, rich colors, and lavish ornamentation inspired by the 1920s-1930s movement.
Browse & Learn
Explore 34 iconic design movements. Pick one that inspires you, study its principles, and submit your own implementation.
A luxurious visual style featuring geometric patterns, bold symmetry, rich colors, and lavish ornamentation inspired by the 1920s-1930s movement.
An ornamental style featuring organic, flowing lines inspired by natural forms, intricate patterns, and elegant curves. The 'new art' of the late 19th century.
A revolutionary German art school movement combining crafts and fine arts, emphasizing functional design, geometric shapes, and primary colors. Form follows function.
A bold, raw aesthetic featuring stark typography, monolithic elements, and deliberately rough or unfinished appearances. Embraces digital constraints as design features.
A Soviet avant-garde movement combining geometric abstraction with bold propaganda aesthetics. Art serving social and political purposes through dynamic compositions.
A contemporary illustration style featuring flat, geometric human figures with oversized limbs and vibrant color palettes, ubiquitous in tech marketing.
A futuristic, dystopian aesthetic featuring neon colors, glitch effects, and high-tech/low-life visual contrasts inspired by science fiction.
A Dutch art movement using only primary colors, black, white, and geometric shapes. Pure abstraction through horizontal and vertical lines.
A rebellious design approach rejecting conventional grid-based layouts, featuring rotated layered typography, distressed textures, and controlled chaos inspired by 1990s punk rock aesthetics.
A bold visual technique using two contrasting colors to create striking, unified imagery. Popular in modern digital design for its graphic impact and brand consistency.
A sophisticated approach to layout emphasizing strong typography, dramatic whitespace, and careful hierarchy inspired by premium magazine and newspaper design.
A minimalist approach using simple 2D elements, bold colors, and clean typography. Eliminates skeuomorphism in favor of simplified user interfaces.
An Italian avant-garde movement celebrating speed, technology, and dynamic motion through fragmented forms, bold typography, and energetic diagonal compositions.
A translucent design style using frosted glass effects, background blur, and layered transparency to create depth and hierarchy.
A moody aesthetic featuring dark color palettes, ornate Victorian elements, dramatic typography, and themes of mystery, romance, and the macabre.
A raw, rebellious aesthetic featuring distressed textures, torn edges, and intentionally chaotic layouts. Embraces imperfection as a design statement.
A 3D-like visual style using parallel projection to create depth without perspective distortion. Popular in tech illustration, gaming, and infographics.
Google's comprehensive design system using paper-like surfaces, realistic lighting, and purposeful motion to create intuitive digital experiences.
A postmodern movement featuring bold colors, geometric shapes, and playful patterns that deliberately defied conventional good taste.
Microsoft's design language emphasizing content over chrome, clean typography, and bold, flat colors. Inspired by transit signage systems.
A design philosophy emphasizing simplicity and the removal of unnecessary elements. Less is more - focusing on essential content and maximum white space.
A soft, extruded aesthetic using subtle shadows to create button-like elements that appear to push out from or sink into the background.
A postmodern graphic design movement breaking Swiss rules with playful experimentation, layered type, geometric shapes, and vibrant 1980s color palettes.
A vibrant movement celebrating popular culture through bold colors, comic-style imagery, halftone patterns, and ironic commentary on consumerism.
A mind-bending visual style featuring vibrant colors, optical illusions, flowing organic shapes, and typography that melts and morphs inspired by 1960s counterculture.
A nostalgic vision of the future as imagined in past eras. Combines atomic age optimism, space age aesthetics, and mid-century modern sensibilities.
A tactile aesthetic inspired by Risograph printing featuring limited color palettes, intentional registration errors, halftone textures, and DIY charm.
A Nordic approach emphasizing simplicity, functionality, and connection to nature. Clean lines, natural materials, and hygge-inspired warmth.
A design approach mimicking real-world materials and objects through textures, shadows, and realistic details to create familiar digital interfaces.
A clean, readable style emphasizing clarity and objectivity through grid-based layouts, sans-serif typography, and asymmetric compositions. Originated in Switzerland in the 1950s.
A demonstration of converting Swiss-style design into Microsoft's Metro design language, featuring bold typography, tile-based layouts, and flat design aesthetics without gradients or shadows.
A retro-futuristic aesthetic featuring 80s/90s nostalgia, pastel colors, glitch art, and ironic appropriation of corporate and consumer imagery.
A Japanese aesthetic philosophy embracing imperfection, impermanence, and incompleteness. Natural textures, asymmetry, and understated elegance.
The turn-of-millennium visual style featuring chrome effects, bubble shapes, cyber elements, and optimistic futurism of the late 1990s to early 2000s.
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