Interested to hear what design tool(s) you're using to make your products, at Product Hunt we use Sketch and I personally love it.
But what are you using and what do you love about it? Or do you want to move away into something new?
We've been using Sketch for ages. In fact, we love it so much we use it for Presentations, in place of Adobe Illustrator in some cases, and beyond its original use for UI/UX!. Though - we've been considering, or at least exploring Figma 2.0 . Have you ever considered the switch? Seems like a close call on the poll above.
A lot has changed since 2017 but when I joined a company I'm working at right now, these were the reasons for switching from Sketch to Figma:
"When I joined AJ&Smart in July, the guys were using Sketch for prototyping. I’m not going to describe how good the tool is because it’s widely known among many design teams in the world but what was missing for us was the possibility collaborate in real time.
Since we work using design sprints only, we prototype at a very high pace during one day in a week. And with Sketch we were just sending the same Sketch file one to another to compile the prototype out of different screens different designers were making.
To align better and improve the speed of prototyping, I suggested we switch to Figma. Because of a few reasons:
1. Real time collaboration directly in the browser.
2. Graphic interface is very similar to Sketch, so no need to learn a completely new tool.
3. Team library: each week we use the same UI elements across different projects (like headers, buttons, dropdowns, etc.), so we built a library of components that we can easily reuse when creating a new prototype (with being able to change fonts, shapes, etc.)
4. Browser based tool: now, when someone who uses Windows or any other OS other than Mac OS, can easily work in Figma using browser or its desktop app. So, when we send the files to clients, it’s just links which they can instantly open, without having to install any additional tools.
5. Prototyping feature: after creating separate screens in the same file, you can connect them into a prototype. The only thing is that it doesn’t have built in interactions yet (like native iOS animations, e.g. swipe back, slide up, etc.). However, most of the times we use Marvel App for creating the prototype itself out of screens we designed in Figma because Marvel app has the interactions mentioned above, device previews, possibility to embed videos or include links to websites.
6. Inspect feature: developers for web, iOS and Android can inspect the design files to find all the margins, styles and even snippets of code for css, objective-c, etc."
I'm using Sketch with Abstract but I'm desperate to switch to Framer. I think what's stopping me is the learning curver as, say Figma 2.0, or Flinto are so similar in UI so the switch is easy.
I really like Figma from the few times I've played with it. I also really like using non design tools for design-y things (designers, don't judge me!) like Keynote which is actually really handy for making social media posts quickly.
I've used Axure RP at my last two companies, and it's really pretty good for advanced prototyping. I like how it uses native form elements so users can actually type data in, make selections, etc., which makes usability testing feel much more real.
I use a combination of Figma + Interplay, Webflow, Framer X, Principle, and used to love using Atomic. Atomic unfortunately shut down, and now I'm on the hunt for a tool as good them that will be useful in every situation like Atomic was.
UI Bakery