I just started watching this guy's videos (not flux, but this particular speaker) and he explains things in a way which finally demystifies alot of it for me. After way too many videos explaining the basics, things really "click" when he explains them.
The websites at 27:08 and 27:48... I kinda like them lol.. haha the colours on the Beauty products I think is suppose to appeal to a younger audience, while the supplements gives me a simurair feel, almost like they are focusing more on audience and feel combo.
Not just colour, but I'd LOVE to see an in-depth video on: fonts, spacing, website/app structure, images, graphics, button styles etc. I feel I can design alright, but getting that theme together for me is by far the hardest part - how to transform the ideals, mission, services, target audience, constrains of a project or company into visual language. Once you get that - damn, it's just pure flow, because essentially you're reusing the same fonts, elements, structure rules across the board. Kinda like a Fibonacci sequence, where many of the basic parts add up together to create the whole visual experience. So yeah, please do consider a long video on that as well!
Hi, Check out our previous videos and playlists where we cover several of the things you've mentioned, including another video by Matt just on fonts. Have fun! 😄
WOW! I've been studying design again, and picking colors for a project brings me a bit of insecurity even after years of working with it. This lecture was SO good. Thank you for breaking down so many elements in a simple way. The examples were extremely helpful!
Nice to hear explicit mention of color tone. Very helpful. The video also shows the importance of a good key light on the subject. What a contrast when it goes off. The image with the key lighting was fantastic, super professional.
Great video, I really appreciated how Matt takes his time to explain things at a real human pace, rather than super fast cuts from point to point trying to make the shortest clickiest RU-vid video out there. I've watched a few videos on color selection and one thing that none of the designers seem to mention is the difference between RGB and CMYK color spaces. Sure a lot of branding is done in a digital RGB space these days, but if you are working with a company who is planning to print a whole bunch of things, then choosing a super bright green like in the first clothing brand example "Hip", the client is going to struggle to get the neon green that was chosen as a brand color unless they source special inks and ultra specialist printing services. I think the client would be kind of disappointed to find out right at the very end they can't easily print their products from standard printing sources, so I wonder why it never seems to get mentioned as something to consider/discuss with your client when choosing brand colors?
Hi there Matt and thanks for this amazing tutorial! Just that the free e-book download links back to the landing page making it unable to be downloaded. Please can you check this out so we have access to your book as I really enjoyed watching this video and would totally be delighted if I can get the color psychology book to it. Thank you :)
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A big bigup from Morocco to Flux team, one of my favorite RU-vid channel on this planet, great free courses and powerful energy and inspiration we got from your videos and thanks fro your effort and sharing with us your experiance ♥️♥️♥️
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Thank you so much, Matt. I'm an upcoming designer and have been learning a lot from your videos. Please could you also make a video on how to use typography, flawlessly? Thank you!
Thank you Matt, for your clear and well ordered presentation style and content/subject matter...Your breakdown of colour and also homepage layout principles has really helped me to think critically about the choices that I will have to make as I'm assembling first thoughts and wire-frame drafts for my new website.
I agree with the other comments that this is very detailed and explained well. The good and bad examples really do help. I do have a question. If your client already has colors and they just want their site updated but wants to keep their colors and they don't quite work that well together. How do you go about that? I understand you can give suggestions and explain why they don't work together but they're adamant about keeping those colors.
One thing I have started doing is asking questions. Like asking them why they chose that color palette and how they want it to affect their audience. What do you want your audience to think, feel, and do? Many business owners choose colors because they like them, not because they will actually affect their customers. I try to help them understand that a business is for your customer, not for yourself.
Wow! Stunning lecture! Thank you so much. Several things clicked for me throughout this lecture. Being methodical in this way creates the sort of umph I’ve lacked in my designs. Can’t thank you enough.
Love this video. Thank you for the clarity it brings to my overall knowledge of amateur in design. I'm a project manager in education (former colorist-hairdresser) & all this matters to me. Brilliant!
I absolutely love how Matt Brunton teaches and his style in general. He has the ability to break things down so clearly to a point where you're able to understand the very essence of it. Let me buy you a beer one day. Huge thank you.
I can't say that I agree on the colors. The "over 40" colorations for the clothing line is drab, decaying. The HIP green is too neon, nauseating. When you're color sensitive, colors are experienced in the body. My tummy is flip flopping. Also, the link for the color book drops a non-working link in my email. Tried opening the link in another tab, it just flashes and nothing. Tried open in new window. I got a window, blank. Inspected, it's an empty page. Just the start of the head html.
The black and green is perfect for young gen clothing, can’t say the same of other combination, needs more tweaking. Color sensitivity is a exception and not a rule, so i guess that’s not who all brands are aiming to satisfy.