Lots of good information, making good looking icons that are small is
quite the chore. :) I'm not sure how good I will be at touching up the
small raster images after rendering but I'll give it a shot.
This is a bit out of the suggested work flow but I started with a
small icon from the system-shutdown SVG source and created a new
system config boot icon based on the suggested metaphor...
http://xorengineering.com/dev/working-24.png
If this seems like the right direction for the metaphor I'll continue.
I'm wondering if my choice of colors for the menu is not such a good
idea, the dialog that comes up for system-config-boot is very basic so
perhaps the menu next to the switch should be more basic in coloring
as well.
I am having trouble locating the render-icon-theme.py script, I don't
see a Fedora package anywhere with the script and a google search
returns some references to the script but not a complete script.
On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 10:48 AM, Jakub Steiner <jsteiner(a)redhat.com> wrote:
----- Original Message -----
>From: "Bryan Nielsen" <bnielsen1965(a)gmail.com>
>To: "Fedora Design Team" <design-team(a)lists.fedoraproject.org>
>Sent: Monday, October 4, 2010 4:52:11 PM GMT +01:00 Amsterdam / Berlin / Bern / Rome /
Stockholm / Vienna
>Subject: Re: [Design-team] Proposed Icon for Ticket #99
>Here are some renderings of the new icon...
>http://xorengineering.com/dev/system-config-boot-22.png
>http://xorengineering.com/dev/system-config-boot-24.png
>http://xorengineering.com/dev/system-config-boot-48.png
Hi Bryan,
as Nicu already mentioned, scaling the high resolution icon down isn't going to work.
As you see on all the gnome-icon-theme plates, we create pixel perfect variants for the
small sizes. Even if it's SVG for editability, the artwork needs to properly align to
the pixel grid to render sharply.
Here's a few links about scalable icons and pixel perfection --
http://jimmac.musichall.cz/log/?p=177
http://turbomilk.com/blog/cookbook/icon_design/10_mistakes_in_icon_design/
http://tango.freedesktop.org/Tango_Icon_Theme_Guidelines
I don't think the metaphor is a strong one. I gave it a little thought and think a
flip switch + menu panel would work best for this --
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jakubsteiner/5051667578/. It is a little abstract and lacks a
unique silhouette, but communicates this being a boot menu editor better than the overused
computer + refresh arrows.
>I used some source SVG files from the gnome themes for the computer
>screen behind the arrows and I chose the largest screen in the source
>file to work with. There were several smaller screens in the same
>source file and I'm wondering if I should have used one of the smaller
>screens to get a better rendering for a small icon.
Indeed, the workflow goes like this - create the highres, scale it down for 48x48, remove
all the detail that won't render. Get rid of all the mask tricks, put 1px strokes in
place. Make sure everything snaps to the pixel grid (snap to bounding box in inkscape).
Once 48x48 is down, repeat for smaller sizes. Once done, edit the icon name and context in
the baseplate layer, hide the baseplate layer and render the icon with
`./render-icon-theme.py icon-name`
Feel free to drop by at #tango on
irc.freenode.org or #gnome-art on gimpnet where there
are a few capable icon artists that can help with specific issues you might encounter.
cheers
--
Jakub Steiner
http://jimmac.musichall.cz
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