Atomic Design: where science and design collide
Years ago, we defined the scope of projects by how many pages the site had. The more pages, the bigger the project. Now while that makes sense in theory, it doesn’t make sense in reality. A designed webpage is actually made up out of different sets of “bricks”. Think: Subway sandwich pieces that you can combine into different delicious combinations.
Brad Frost wrote a book on the subject last year called Atomic Design and the gist of it is this:
Atomic design is a methodology composed of five distinct stages working together to create interface design systems in a more deliberate and hierarchical manner.
The stages that Brad outline are:
- Atoms are the basic building blocks of it all – they include things like buttons, form labels, inputs, and other similar elements.
- Molecules are simple groups of UI elements functioning as a unit – think of a search form that consists of a button, a form label, and an input field.
- Organisms are bigger UI components combining both atoms and molecules. This could be the header of a webpage that consists of a logotype, a navigation, and a search form.
- Templates combines different organisms into a functioning whole – think of a wireframe. It has all the organisms in place, but there’s no actual content there yet. This is the blueprint or skeleton of a page.
- Pages are the final stage – they shows what the template looks like with real representative content in place.
While I’m currently working on two projects that are very different in terms of pages (one is nearly 10,000 pages and the other is less than 5 pages), they both require a solid design system to make sure we’ve got all the stages covered from the start.
If you’re interested in learning more about design systems, feel free to e-mail and I’ll be sure to answer!
Here’s some great further reading on the topic:
Atomic Design by Brad Frost
http://atomicdesign.bradfrost.comCooking with Design Systems by Dan Mall
http://danmall.me/articles/cooking-with-design-systems/Setup a design system by Marco Lopes
https://blog.prototypr.io/design-system-ac88c6740f53#.bvym62je5Did you enjoy this article?
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