Learning tools & resources to help you become a better designer.

Wondering when to apply which design methods, tools or need a knowledge hub of UX design? Get access to handpicked 2000+ resources; tools, books, videos, podcasts and courses in a beautifully designed Notion index.

1984.design is a learning and UX design archive, with a growing database packed with over 2000+ design resources, like books, tools, illustrations, icons, mockups, stock images, fonts and more. No matter if you are searching for tools to boost your creativity, templates and icons you kick off your next project, or blog and podcasts to spark ideas and get inspiration, 1984.design got you covered. The whole directory and archive are beautifully structured in Notion with different categories, so you can find what you are looking for with ease.

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21st Century Design with Don Norman—Now Open!

In this newly-released course, your instructor is none other than Don Norman, the Godfather of UX Design!

You’ll learn how as a designer, you can apply human-centered design to solve complex global challenges. You'll learn what 21st Century skills you need to make a difference in the world—and how to develop them.

Each lesson will build upon another to expand your knowledge of human-centered design. You'll also get valuable tips from Don Norman on how to tackle complex problems, grow your influence in your organization, learn from failures, improve how you communicate and how to think (and work) in systems. 

🎓 Design for the 21st Century with Don Norman

You will get 3 months of free membership!

And you'll also learn:

  • Why designers are so special and how we can democratize design
  • How to use systems thinking to investigate the entire system
  • How today's methods for designing and measuring success are wrong
  • How to move up in a company and address bigger design challenges
  • How to communicate clearly and gain interest

The course also includes a practical Build Your Portfolio project to help you showcase what you learn in the course to recruiters and clients. In the course, you'll get free, ready-to-use downloadable templates that can help you apply Don's unique perspectives in your design practice. 



Discover 21st Century Design

What does it mean to design for the 21st Century? 🔮 In this collection of FREE articles and videos, Don Norman explains what designers need to learn, develop and do in order to live up to the needs and expectations of the future. 

-> Discover the topic

New Partner: Interaction Design Foundation

You should not take any risks with your design education when you want to learn and advance your career. Your course content should be evidence-based and valuable to your job.

On this mission, we partnered with the Interaction Design Foundation, the World’s leading online design school which serves peer-reviewed, evidence based educational materials, and now you can enroll through our collaboration to get 3 months off your yearly membership!

Get your industry-recognized course certificates, which is trusted by IBM and Adobe who train their teams with IDF courses, to make a life-changing shift into UX design or stay ahead. Start learning now to advance your career.

đź“° Remote Design Newsletter

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📌 Remote jobs
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Welcome. First things first. 🌱

Billboard Design:  Jonathan Barnbrook / Adbusters. License: All Rights Reserved.

Billboard Design:  Jonathan Barnbrook / Adbusters. License: All Rights Reserved.

We, the undersigned, are designers who have been raised in a world in which we put profit over people and the planet in an attempt to keep the gears of capitalism greased and well maintained. Our time and energy are increasingly used to manufacture demand, to exploit populations, to extract resources, to fill landfills, to pollute the air, to promote colonization, and to propel our planet’s sixth mass extinction. We have helped to create comfortable, happy lives for some of our species and allowed harm to others; our designs, at times, serve to exclude, eliminate, and discriminate.

Many design teachers and professionals perpetuate this ideology; the markets reward it; a tide of imitations and “likes” reinforces it. Encouraged in this direction, designers then apply their skills and imagination to sell fast fashion, fast cars, and fast food; disposable cups, bubble wrap, and unending amounts of single-use plastics; fidget spinners, microwave dinners, and nose hair trimmers. We market unhealthy body images and diets; products and apps that propagate social isolation and depression; the consumption of unbalanced food systems; we sell pills to pop, tiks to tok, and a scrolling feed that never stops… and then the desire to consume it all over again and again. Yes, commercial work has always paid the bills, but many designers have let it become, in large measure, what designers do. This, in turn, is how the world perceives design.

Many of us have grown increasingly uncomfortable with this view of design. Because of this, we call for a massive change in what and how designers design. Climate change is critically entangled with class, race, and gender-based dominance, we can no longer push for merely sustainability, but must create new systems that undo and heal what’s been done.

What We Must Do

  • We must challenge and examine the histories, processes, and ethics of design and develop new creative skills, resources, collaborations, and languages of design.
  • We must support community-based efforts of justice, healing, co-existence, and mutual respect. 
  • We must understand that we are not outside of nature; we are a part of a complex system and our actions must reflect that knowledge.
  • We must reverse our profession’s priorities in favor of more inclusive, empathetic, and engaged forms of action — a mind-shift that goes beyond sustainability — towards regeneration, exploration, and co-creation of a non-exploitative, non-appropriative set of social-environmental relations.
  • We must commit to reconnecting design, manufacturing, distribution, and use of the things we design to the Earth — and all of its inhabitants.
  • We must direct our skills for the betterment of humanity towards a more ecological civilization.
  • We believe all of these principles should be integrated into multidisciplinary design pedagogy.
  • We do not advocate the reduction of design to a singular focus: this is not feasible. Nor do we want to take any of the fun out of life. But we are proposing a reversal of priorities in favor of more useful, generative, and equitable forms of design.

In 1964, 22 visual communicators, young and old, signed the original call for our skills to be put to worthwhile use. In 2000, 33 designers signed a revised version of the original call, and in 2014 — on the 50th anniversary of the manifesto — over 1600 designers around the world renewed their commitment to the First Things First Manifesto. With the ongoing destruction of essential living systems on our planet, this message has only grown more urgent. As we celebrate the 50th anniversary of Earth Day, we renew the previous manifestos with a greater sense of urgency as we see the compounded effects of our climate crisis unfold before us. It is imperative that we take climate action now.

We believe the First Things First Manifesto should reflect collective thoughts on what the world needs and where design plays a role within that world. 

Join us in taking action.

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