Mood Boards for Better Websites

redstonestudio
01.27.22
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What is a Mood Board?

Mood boards set the tone and inspiration for a design project. Traditional mood boards consisted of physical materials and elements that, together, set the tone and direction for the overall design and style. With digital mood boards, it has become easier to spark conversations and get stakeholders on the same page quickly, before the project starts.

Perhaps one of the most beneficial uses of the mood board is to get agreement on the style and look before the project begins. This is really helpful in rapid prototyping for websites or apps, as they can save time and resources before going through an actual rendering of a design mockup or prototype.

Here at Red Stone Studio, we’ve found it also helps our clients to articulate their ideas during a discovery then see what those look like visually, in terms of the colors, imagery, type and icons, and how that aligns with the project or creative brief. One person’s idea of “Clean and Fresh” might look slightly “Stale and Sordid” to another.

Elements of a Mood Board

While there are no hard rules or formulas to follow in order to start mood boarding (yes, I made that a verb), you might find it helpful to make sure that the mood board reflects the main goals of the brief. For instance, if you’re working on a website, you might include interactions or moving transitions on the digital mood board that could hint at what the user experience will look like. In contrast, if you’re designing an identity or a brand, you might include a broader range of elements that can appropriately reflect those. And, of course, it goes without saying that the mood board must be aligned with the current brand’s identity and aligned with the target audience.

The basic composition for most digital mood boards includes:

Color

You should always start a mood board by selecting and pairing colors. Color is one of the most powerful visual components that communicates meaning and messaging instantaneously. In fact, research from the University of Loyola, Maryland shows that 60% of people choose whether they are attracted to a message based on the color alone! 

This should be the foundational point for you to align or set the overall tone for the project. One of the tools you can use for this is Adobe Color. It is intuitive and fast to get a color palette and variants done.

Imagery

Like color, images convey a lot of information in just a few seconds compared to reading or listening to any of the key messaging. Unsplash and Adobe Stock images are good to rely on for this. 

Whatever program you choose, consider the filtering options by color, theme, and other variants.

Typography

Fonts should align with the overall brand, style, and mood. You can generally start with Adobe Fonts and Google Fonts then move onto any additional font foundries and collections. A helpful resource on font selection is: A Pro Designer Share the Psychology of Font Choices.

Interactions

One of the best things about using digital mood boards is being able to include interactions; those small, subtle, yet powerful details that can make a strong statement. For images, include cinemagraphs as an extra touch to enhance the mood.

Photographer, Jamie Beck

Less is more  when it comes to interactions. For UI mood boards and style tiles, you can show a “taste” of what transitions and icons might look like by including a small sampling, like the image below.

Comments or Explanations

Seeing the images, type, colors, etc. on the mood board is great to set the overall feel and tone for the project. It is really helpful when a contributor selects an image and provides comments as to why they selected that particular image. This can help clarify why the image was selected and the significance or meaning it holds. 

Pinterest can be a great starting point for collecting images, as many people are more comfortable selecting images that inspire them on a Pinterest board. Just make sure to provide a comment explaining “why” the image was chosen. This allows the designer to collect all the assets and select the images that resonate the most with the goals of the project.

The Style Tiles or Mood Board?

This is where the conversation gets interesting. Style Tiles are a relatively new idea, presented by Samantha Warren. The idea is similar to the way that interior designers present ideas to clients. 

During a kick-off meeting, the interior designer uses fabric swatches, materials samples, and paint chips to get a general sense of what direction the final design should go. The style tile provides clients with interface choices without making the investment in multiple design mockups.

What makes a style tile unique from other tools is that it is specifically a method for establishing a visual vocabulary between the designer and the client rather than setting a “mood” or defining elements that will ultimately be included in a full layout.

Style tiles are best used when a mood board is too vague and a full-blown mockup is too precise or premature to use. They work best for the client to get a general sense of the style and look. They’re meant as a way of getting a quick YES/NO response. 

Style tiles can also help focus the conversation without getting lost in the minutia of the details of a full-blown mockup. Style tiles can help clients come to a general sense of what the website’s feel could look like without designing a full prototype from scratch, which invariably saves time and money.

Samantha suggests three variations that use an aggressive, moderate, and conservative approach to the style. The three style tiles below are examples (in order) of this approach.

Examples of the Style Tiles and Final Site

Style Tiles, by Samantha Warren. Final Site

Mood Boards for Inspiration

Need some visual inspiration to get the creative juices flowing? Here are a few mood boards to help draw inspiration to get your own board started:

Beasty Design

Laura Budinger

Studio Antheia

Purple

Emily Holt

Resources for Mood Boards

There are a lot of tools and platforms specifically geared toward mood boards and style tiles creation. Below is just a short list of some of the tools that colleagues and associates have been using.

  • Canva is a great resource to get a mood board set up quickly and allows users the ability to edit and enhance images directly in the app. It’s a cost-effective solution and typically provides ready-to-go templates.
  • Milanote is a great resource for research and organizing your inspiration. It’s like a virtual wall that you can pin things on. The boards are infinite in size, accessible from anywhere, and remain active after the project is over.
  • Niice has provided some great functionality into one easy-to-use tool. With Niice, users can source inspirational images, collect them in their own private spaces, and leverage the drag-and-drop interface to whip up a mood board in minutes.
  • Mural is a tool that’s not built exclusively for designers. It can be used by project leads, developers, educators, and managers as a tool to collaborate and share ideas. It’s great for agile, lean, and design-thinking methodologies.
  • Invision has become one of the industry leaders in the creative community for design and prototyping, thanks to their collaborative features that can be shared across all devices and with any stakeholders or clients. It’s pretty simple to set up a mood board and share out to a client fast.

Conclusion

As a designer, one of things you want to avoid, especially when going into the design phase and presenting design options, is a statement like, “I’ll know it when I see it.” Mood boards and style tiles help capture, clarify, and align vision so you can have “know it” and “see it” moments before the design phase commences.

Avoid surprises at the end of a project and get it right the first time! Mood boards help spark conversations, save time, and set the tone to inspire your project.

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