Not sure if it's more relavant to Creative or Technology, so cross-posting here from: https://beehaw.org/post/743965
> Exactly a week later, hello again! > > I was so flattered by people's reaction to my last post - thank you for making me feel so welcomed by this community! I'm still toying with icon redesigns, but I noticed that people were equally (if not more) interested in the theme ideas I posted - so I've spent the last week trying to make them a reality! I call them Hive Light and Hive Dark, and I think they're ready to share with you all. > > I was able to incorporate lots of tweaks to Beehaw's UI, including: > > - Customisable levels of minimalisation > - Consistent padding and spacing site-wide, increasing legibility and cleanliness without sacrificing too much information density > - Repositioned various UI/UX elements to make Beehaw easier and more intuitive to navigate > - Consistent bee-themed colors! Lots of yellows, browns, and blues that play nice with each other and pass accessibility standards > - Hover effects to reduce unnecessary line breaks with long hyperlinks > - And more! But not that much more, it's just some CSS after all ;) > > Hive Light: > > ! > > ! > > Hive Dark: > > ! > > ! > > There are more screenshots on the GitHub! > > Installation is pretty simple as well: > > - Install Stylebot - this was the only CSS extension I found that worked reliably across browsers and consistently applied settings. YMMV with other extensions - Stylus just didn't work well for me :( > - Check your Beehaw settings and select "darkly" if you want to use Hive Dark, and "litely" if you want to use Hive Light > - Copy and paste the contents of either Hive_Light_Theme.css or Hive_Dark_Theme.css from the GitHub page into the "code" section of Stylebot > - Et Violà! > > This isn't my first time designing a UI, but it is my first time doing it with CSS edits, so I fully expect there to bugs and inefficient code. I would love to hear your feedback and incorporate new ideas into future versions. And feel free to copy my homework! If I can figure out this CSS stuff in a week, so can you, and I'd love to see what other people create. > > One caveat: the Lemmy v0.18.0 release includes lots of (really awesome) updates to Lemmy-UI that will break this theme. I don't know when Beehaw will update, but I imagine it's imminent, so there will be more work to be done soon I'm afraid. > > Thanks for reading, and take care!
Exactly a week later, hello again!
I was so flattered by people's reaction to my last post - thank you for making me feel so welcomed by this community! I'm still toying with icon redesigns, but I noticed that people were equally (if not more) interested in the theme ideas I posted - so I've spent the last week trying to make them a reality! I call them Hive Light and Hive Dark, and I think they're ready to share with you all.
I was able to incorporate lots of tweaks to Beehaw's UI, including:
- Customisable levels of minimalisation
- Consistent padding and spacing site-wide, increasing legibility and cleanliness without sacrificing too much information density
- Repositioned various UI/UX elements to make Beehaw easier and more intuitive to navigate
- Consistent bee-themed colors! Lots of yellows, browns, and blues that play nice with each other and pass accessibility standards
- Hover effects to reduce unnecessary line breaks with long hyperlinks
- And more! But not that much more, it's just some CSS after all ;)
Hive Light:
Hive Dark:
There are more screenshots on the GitHub!
Installation is pretty simple as well:
- Install Stylebot - this was the only CSS extension I found that worked reliably across browsers and consistently applied settings. YMMV with other extensions - Stylus just didn't work well for me :(
- Check your Beehaw settings and select "darkly" if you want to use Hive Dark, and "litely" if you want to use Hive Light
- Copy and paste the contents of either Hive_Light_Theme.css or Hive_Dark_Theme.css from the GitHub page into the "code" section of Stylebot
- Et Violà!
This isn't my first time designing a UI, but it is my first time doing it with CSS edits, so I fully expect there to bugs and inefficient code. I would love to hear your feedback and incorporate new ideas into future versions. And feel free to copy my homework! If I can figure out this CSS stuff in a week, so can you, and I'd love to see what other people create.
One caveat: the Lemmy v0.18.0 release includes lots of (really awesome) updates to Lemmy-UI that will break this theme. I don't know when Beehaw will update, but I imagine it's imminent, so there will be more work to be done soon I'm afraid.
Thanks for reading, and take care!
Edit: I posted the first release of my theme based on the ideas in this post here!
Hi everyone!
I'm an Industrial/Product Designer in my professional life, and I was so inspired by @UrLogicFails's fantastic new community icons that I wanted to try out some of my own design ideas for Beehaw.
First, I tried my hand at an icon for Beehaw. I'm endeared to the little pixelated bee-cowboy we have now, but my background is in cleaner, more minimal designs that are easy to deploy to lots of different devices. A good logo sets a good first impression, and I want new users to see Beehaw as a real, legitimate alternative vision for social media. I've tried to recreate the back of a bee, and used the wings to form a subtle letter "B." My personal favorite is the hexagon bestagon, but I have both iOS and Android variations. Icon design is always really contentious, but it's also really fun - I'd love to see other people's ideas!
Second, I took a stab at tweaking the design of Beehaw, with the goals improving the layout and padding, introducing a more consistent color scheme, increasing legibility, and (of course) incorporating more bee elements. I'm working on a CSS theme that incorporates some of these changes, but others are beyond the scope of CSS injections and will require actual work on Lemmy-UI.
I'd love to hear your thoughts, and I'm happy to share more if people are interested :)
Thanks for viewing, take care!
It's one thing to test a new idea or a UX tweak or similar on a small portion of users - but just turning off a key way to access your service is so just so weird to me. How many of Reddit's decisions at this point are some version of, "hey, how angry do they get? What can we get away with?"