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Nimeshi706

: Moodboards: how to use them in a workflow? I'm new to design and have started working with moodboards. It seems like a really essential part of a design workflow. How best do you use them?

@Nimeshi706

Posted in: #DesignPrinciples #Visualization #Workflow

I'm new to design and have started working with moodboards. It seems like a really essential part of a design workflow.

How best do you use them?
What is a good process for compiling one?
What is in a typical design moodboard?

Extra point for an examples I can look at.

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@Shelley591

I've found the usefulness of mood boards to be entirely dependent on the particular client. Some find them highly useful, while others will just scratch their heads. So, it's really something you gauge from project to project, IMHO.

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@Jennifer810

Mood boards, very roughly, are to design what high-level block diagrams are to programming: a way to pull the basic elements of together so you can have a broad agreement on what the end result will look like.

There was a great example of putting together a mood board in the Day 1 keynote at Adobe MAX this year, when Mark Magner from Sesame Workshop demonstrated using a couple of the new Adobe touch apps. His segment starts at about 15:30 into the video. What's instructive here is not only the use of a mood board, but also the end product that resulted from it.

Mood boards are essential when you have a large project that will take a lot of work to develop, and you need to be sure that you and the client are on the same page before you invest tons of time. They're also great for just playing with ideas while searching for that "Ah-ha!" moment when you suddenly know what direction you need to go with on a design. It gets you past that initial period with a new project where you feel completely blank, can't get a handle on it, and wonder if your entire career up to that point has been a fluke and maybe you weren't really cut out to be a designer after all. (It happens to all of us.)

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