12 Free UX & UI Books That Worth Your Reading for 2018
Though UX/UI design has no widely-accepted definition, we can still say with certainty that it’s about the user and creating the pleasure when using a project. Such a big subject can be intimidating on first glance, and the sheer amount of UX/UI books also make most of us feel overwhelmed. For those looking for expert techniques so as to get an edge in UX design, we have rounded up a complete list of 12 free UX and UI books that anyone can enjoy and benefit from. Take a look and may you find the favorite one to sharpen your skills!
1. The Encyclopedia of Human Computer Interaction
Free and high quality textbooks recommended by Don Norman, “I highly recommend the Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction, the breadth and the depth of the invited contributions are quite impressive, all with highly qualified authorities as authors.” They are well written by more than 100 design experts, bestselling authors as well as Ivy League professors. Those textbooks, featuring 4,000+ page encyclopedia, covers a wide range of Human Computer Interaction related topics, including social computing, contextual design, requirements engineering, usability evaluation, tactile interaction, visual aesthetics and 3D user interfaces, etc.
2. 50 User Experience Best Practices
As a classic in UX design, 50 User Experience Best Practices outlasted the design agency that originally wrote it. Covering all aspects of user experience design from user research to front-end development, this guidebook adopts reasonable backing and illustrative visuals to showcase 50 best practices for UX professionals. Those listed techniques are broken into categories for better understanding and fast browsing.
3. UX Design Trends 2015 & 2016
The book is authored by experts at UXPin, a UX design platform for web and mobile interfaces with rich wireframing apps. Focusing on trends that become time-efficient techniques, this ebook outlines 6 most practices at the moment, including:
* Adaptive web design.
* Microinteraction.
* Personalized UX.
* Empowering UX design.
* Meaningful gamification.
* Designing web services.
4. Web UI Design Best Practices
As a cover-all guide of UXPin, Web UI Design Best Practices endows serial technical analysis written with simple language that readers usually expect. It’s broken into different sections on color, visual hierarchy, UI patterns, typography and navigation, etc.
5. Magic of CSS
Believe it or not, CSS plays a more and more important role in our modern design. Adam Schwartz, the author of Magic of CSS, introduces some tricky aspects of CSS in easy-to-follow and straightforward language. It’s comprised of several chapters, including The Box, Layout, Tables, Color, Typography, Transitions and much more interactive examples.
6. Bright Ideas for User Experience Designers
This is another classic published by usability consultancy firm — Userfocus. A big plus of this book is the adopted laid-back and casual tone, which makes it memorable for readers. The acronyms of Beatles Analogies and “the CRAP way to usability” also make this book an interesting read.
7. The UX Reader
The UX Reader of MailChimp includes all of the important components involved in the UX design process. The all-in-one ebook is great for beginners to learn from scratch, but is a handy guideline for veterans to put on their shelves. It delivers valuable insights and lays out UX design into 5 categories: Collaboration, Research, Design, Development and Refinement. It’s available for free download.
8. The UX Book
Written by Rex Harston, this ebook aims to ensure a quality user experience and help readers perform well on creating and refining designs. It’s kind of textbookish but comes a hell of useful knowledge and solid information for all experience levels. According to TechWhirl.com, “The book is brimming with advanced knowledge of perfecting written communication in our mobile digital age if you write anything at all.”
9. Don’t Make Me Think
The previous versions of this well-acknowledged book sold over 400 thousand copies since the first edition in 2000. Each edition has become much-loved introductions to hundreds of thousands of developers and web designers. The third edition is still much needed after 16 years back and returns with fresh insight to re-examine the principals on mobile usability.
10. UX Storytellers: Connecting the Dots
Considered as a classic among UX books, UX Storytellers is deviated from a “textbook” format. As its name indicates, the book makes a good collection of real-life advice and stories from 42 UX professionals and experts in this field. It was firstly published in 2009 and still continues to be a very insightful read to learn about the solutions and struggles that UX designers doomed to face.
11. UX Design for Startups
This is an ebook of Mardn Treder, covering 127 pages of life-based advice for both start-ups and grown-up companies. Almost every company tends to use refreshed user interface/experience design, and those handpicked prototyping and wireframing design tools will be a good companion for mobile and web app designs. With it, anyone can quickly learn how to validate product assumptions and thus optimize designs.
12. Web Design Book of Trends
A free book for web designers with 166 examples of web design and the latest trends in 2016. Also there is a list of 100 preferred design resources, along with a number of case studies showing the best techniques. Those cited practices come from renowned companies, such as Intercom, Reebok, BMW, Adidas, Google, Jawbone and much more.
13. The Guide to Wireframing
With more than 100 page, this book is a complete companion for engineers, PMs, designers and anyone who will touch a product. Not only does it include a comparison of prototyping tools, but also explain trending UI design patterns. This free ebook will guide you through the best practice and theory of design across every stage in the development process.
I want to suggest two books which helped me to shape my carrier in UX designing.
ReplyDeleteMy most favorite one is "White Hat UX: The Next Generation in User Experience"
Many products on the market try every trick in the design and psychology manual to distract the user from what he wants to achieve. Online ads, OneClick purchase buttons, "read" labels in messaging apps, and auto-ticked login boxes are all examples of "Black Hat UX," as the author calls it. The collected knowledge about our users will be used against them. Trine Falbe wants to use this book to show you the concept of White Hat UX by showing the most common patterns of Black Hat UX and providing valid alternatives. I used techniques mention in this book for medical office marketing website and deliver outstanding results. You will learn how to optimize placement of call to action buttons and color psychology for every section for the website.
For whom the UX book is particularly helpful: UX Designer, UX Researcher, for all the deliberately deceptive UX is a thorn in the eye
This one I recently read titled "Atomic Design"
As you know nowadays, designers need to design UIs designed for more users, more contexts, more browser types, more devices, more screen sizes, and more features than ever before. It is getting more complex. Fortunately, there are "design systems". This book describes everything you need to create a robust design system and keep you up-to-date. This, in turn, allows you to roll out your UI's with higher quality, more consistency, and higher speed. You'll learn a method for splitting your UIs into hierarchies, why you need pattern libraries, and techniques to improve your design and development workflows.
For whom the UX book is particularly helpful: UI designers, UX managers, teams that want to introduce design systems into their companies