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Ios 11 App Icon Design

App Icon

Beautiful app icons are an important part of the user experience on all Apple platforms. A unique, memorable icon evokes your app and can help people recognize it at a glance on the desktop, in Finder, and in the Dock. Polished, expressive icons can also hint at an app's personality and even its overall level of quality.

In macOS 11, app icons share a common set of visual attributes, including the rounded-rectangle shape, front-facing perspective, level position, and uniform drop shadow. Rooted in the macOS 11 design language, these attributes showcase the lifelike rendering style people expect in macOS while presenting a harmonious user experience. To download templates that specify the correct shape and drop shadow, see Apple Design Resources.

Images of app icons for Mail, Photos, and System Preferences as seen in macOS 11. The Mail icon shows a white envelope on a blue rounded rectangle. The envelope uses shading to suggest a three dimensional object. The Photos icon shows eight lozenge shapes fanned out in a circle on a white rounded rectangle background. Each shape is a different color of the rainbow. The System Preferences icon shows two concentric circular gears, both with many teeth, set into a gray rounded rectangle.

IMPORTANT When you update your app for macOS 11, use your new app icon design to replace the icon you designed for earlier versions. You can't include two different app icons for one app, and the macOS 11 app icon style looks fine on a Mac running Catalina or earlier.

Design a beautiful icon that clearly represents your app. Combine an engaging design with an artistic interpretation of your app's purpose that people can instantly understand.

Embrace simplicity. Find a concept or element that captures the essence of your app and express it in a simple, unique way, adding details only when doing so enhances meaning. Too many details can be hard to discern and can make the icon appear muddy, especially at smaller sizes.

Establish a single focus point. A single, centered point of interest captures the user's attention and helps them recognize your app at a glance. Presenting multiple focus points can obscure the icon's message.

To give people a familiar and consistent experience, prefer a design that works well across multiple platforms. If your app runs on other platforms, use a similar image for all app icons while rendering them in the style that's appropriate for each platform. For example, in iOS and watchOS, the Mail app icon depicts the white envelope in a streamlined, graphical style; in macOS 11, the envelope includes depth and detail that communicate a realistic weight and texture.

Image of the Mail app icon as it appears in iOS.

iOS

Image of the Mail app icon as it appears in macOS 11.

macOS 11

Consider depicting a familiar tool to communicate what people use your app to do. To give context to your app's purpose, you can use the icon background to portray the tool's environment or the items it affects. For example, the TextEdit icon pairs a mechanical pencil with a sheet of lined paper to suggest a utilitarian writing experience. After you create a detailed, realistic image of a tool, it often works well to let it float just above the background and extend slightly past the icon boundaries. If you do this, make sure the tool remains visually unified with the background and doesn't overwhelm the rounded-rectangle shape.

Image of the TextEdit app icon in macOS 11. The icon shows an image of white paper ruled with gray horizontal lines and one red vertical line that indicates the left margin. The image is masked to a rounded rectangle shape and it includes a realistic mechanical pencil in front of it, slanting from top-right to bottom-left.

Make real objects look real. If you depict real objects in your app icon, make them look like they're made of physical materials and have actual mass. Replicate the characteristics of substances like fabric, glass, paper, and metal to convey an object's weight and feel. For example, the Xcode app icon features a hammer that looks like it has a steel head and polymer grip.

Image of the Xcode app icon.

If text is essential for communicating your app's purpose, consider creating a graphic abstraction of it. Actual text in an icon can be difficult to read and doesn't support accessibility or localization. To give the impression of text without implying that people should zoom in to read it, you can create a graphic texture that suggests it.

To depict photos or parts of your app's UI, create idealized images that emphasize the features you want people to notice. Photos are often full of details that obscure the main content when viewed at small sizes. If you want to use a photo in your icon, pick one with strongly contrasting values that make the main subject stand out. Remove unimportant details that make primary lines and shapes fuzzy or indistinct. If your app has a UI that people recognize, avoid simply replicating standard UI elements or using a screenshot in your icon. Instead, consider designing a graphic that echoes the UI and expresses the personality of your app.

The Preview app icon, which shows an idealized photo of a seascape.

The Reminders app icon, which shows three horizontal lines, each preceded by a different color bullet, echoing the colors people can apply to their reminder items.

Don't use replicas of Apple hardware products. Apple products are copyrighted and can't be reproduced in your icons or images. Avoid displaying replicas of devices, because hardware designs tend to change frequently and can make your icon look dated.

Use the drop shadow in the icon-design template. The template includes the system-defined drop shadow that helps your app icon coordinate with other macOS 11 icons.

Consider using interior shadows and highlights to add definition and realism. For example, the Mail app icon uses both shadows and highlights to give the envelope authenticity and to suggest that the flap is slightly open. In icons that include a tool that floats above a background — such as TextEdit or Xcode — interior shadows can strengthen the perception of depth and make the tool look real. Shadows and highlights should suggest a light source that faces the icon, positioned just above center and tilted slightly downward.

Avoid defining contours that suggest a shape other than a rounded rectangle. In rare cases, you might want to fine-tune the basic app icon shape, but doing so risks creating an icon that looks like it doesn't belong in macOS 11. If you must alter the shape, prefer subtle adjustments that continue to express a rounded rectangle silhouette.

The Final Cut Pro X app icon, which is an idealized version of a clapperboard. The overall shape of the icon is a rounded rectangle, even though the arm of the clapperboard is raised slightly at the top.

Consider adding a slight glow just inside the edges of your icon. If your app icon includes a dark reflective surface, like glass or metal, add an inner glow to make the icon stand out and prevent it from appearing to dissolve into dark backgrounds.

Keep primary content within the icon grid bounding box; keep all content within the outer bounding box. If an icon's primary content extends beyond the icon grid bounding box, it tends to look out of place. If you overlay a tool on your icon, it works well to align the tool's top edge with the outer bounding box and its bottom edge with the inner bounding box, as shown below.

A diagram that shows various placement lines within a rounded rectangle shape. Centered in the diagram is a grid of horizontal and vertical lines, overlaid with three concentric circles and two diagonal lines. The outer boundary of the grid is a rounded rectangle labeled the icon grid bounding box. Outside the icon grid bounding box are two additional concentric rounded rectangles labeled the inner bounding box and outer bounding box. A long, narrow, shaded lozenge shape is on top of the grid, representing an approximate layout location for a tool. The tool shape extends from the inner bounding box to the outer bounding box, slanting from vertical at about 25 degrees to the right.

In addition to the bounding boxes and suggested tool placement, the icon design template provides a grid to help you position items within an icon. You can also use the icon grid to ensure that centered inner elements like circles use a size that's consistent with other icons in the system.

App Icon Attributes

All app icons should use the following specifications.

Attribute Value
Format PNG
Color space sRGB (color) or Gray Gamma 2.2 (grayscale)
Layers Flattened with transparency as appropriate
Resolution @1x and @2x (see Image Size and Resolution)
Shape Square with rounded corners

Don't provide app icons in ICNS or JPEG format. The ICNS format doesn't support features like wide color gamut or deliver the performance and efficiency you get when you use asset catalogs. JPEG doesn't support transparency through alpha channels, and its compression can blur or distort an icon's images. For best results, add deinterlaced PNG files to the app icon fields of your Xcode project's asset catalog.

App Icon Sizes

Your app icon is displayed in many places, including in Finder, the Dock, Launchpad, and the App Store. To ensure that your app icon looks great everywhere people see it, provide it in the following sizes:

  • 512x512 pt (512x512 px @1x, 1024x1024 px @2x)
  • 256x256 pt (256x256 px @1x, 512x512 px @2x)
  • 128x128 pt (128x128 px @1x, 256x256 px @2x)
  • 32x32 pt (32x32 px @1x, 64x64 px @2x)
  • 16x16 pt (16x16 px @1x, 32x32 px @2x)

Maintain visual consistency in all icon sizes. As icon size decreases, fine details become muddy and hard to distinguish. At the smallest sizes, it's important to remove unnecessary features and exaggerate primary features to help the content remain clear. As you simplify icons that are visually smaller, don't let them appear drastically different from their larger counterparts. Strive to make subtle variations that ensure the icon remains visually consistent when displayed in different environments. For example, if people drag your icon between displays with different resolutions, the icon's appearance shouldn't suddenly change.

Two images of the Safari app icon, shown side by side. On the left is the 512 by 512 size, which clearly shows the red and white needle (which points northeast), and the circle of tick marks that indicate degrees on top of the blue disk. On the right is the 16 by 16 size, which shows a pixellated red and white needle pointing northeast on top of a pixellated blue disk, but no tick marks.

The 512x512 pt Safari app icon (on the left) uses a circle of tick marks to indicate degrees; the 16x16 pt version of the icon (on the right) doesn't include this detail.

Ios 11 App Icon Design

Source: https://developer.apple.com/design/human-interface-guidelines/macos/icons-and-images/app-icon/

Posted by: clyburnnotle1973.blogspot.com

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