DailyUI 030 – Pricing
Day 30! So far so good, I was afraid I would have quit much earlier. But I’m still going strong with this. Slight breaks might happen in the future, but I’ll see this through to the end.
Anyway, for this one we had to make a pricing solution. As always the most difficult point for me is figuring out the actual content to design around. Researching I see a lot of subscription services for enterprise type things. I wanted to go simpler, and I started thinking about what kind of subscription services I use on a regular basis. The one that gets the most use is of course my music sub and that’s where I’m at with this.
Most designs like this these days have some sort of illustration up top to visualise the difference in tiers. I went with the most simple of things: illustrating the users that get to take part of the tier itself. First tier is 1 user so one character, second tier is 4 users so four characters. The style here is also different from how I usually illustrate things. I figured I’d try a style that seems quite popular. Slightly off axis fill colour and disjointed outlines. I don’t think I managed to capture that style exactly, but the point is made. I feel like I maybe should have created different ones for the family tier since it looks a bit strange copied 3 times, but for the sake of time I kept with one.
I also went with a monochromatic colouring style. Not wanting to overcomplicate things and overwhelm with colours, I went with a simple blue tone. Font choice here is a mix. Modern Grotesk for the title and pricing to add a bit of extra flair, and then Lato for the regular text and dollar sign. I did it like this because Modern didn’t have its own dollar sign and it didn’t translate well to regular, readable text. Big subscribe buttons also felt natural in a situation like this.
At the end I think I could have made it a bit more visual in the way which one is selected or having a “recommended” type of thing. But considering the two tiers are so different from each other I don’t know if that would have even been needed. Either way, happy listening. Here’s to 70 more.