Sci-fi books, movies, and shows often accurately predict the future. From debit cards to video chat to landing on the moon — even the UI designs seen in Star Trek and the like are pretty on-trend.

It seems like sci-fi accurately predicted the flat design movement in UI, but sci-fi shows took their designs a step further, relying mostly on typography and lines.

Form follows function, and it seems like we’re always moving towards cutting more clutter and focusing on what matters most: solving a user’s problem and providing a clear offering.

We started with skeuomorphic design then went to flat design, and now I think we should challenge ourselves to design interfaces like the ones we’ve admired in sci-fi with just type and little-to-nothing else. This new style can be called Type Design.

We need a better solution for making designs that are faster to iterate but still look beautiful. Our flat designs are not so flat anymore — they take forever to work on, maintain, and change. I’m not saying we should ditch intricate designs entirely; I’m just saying we need a second option.

The Possibility and Promise of Type Design

Here is why we can make type designs possible today:

Typography has advanced so much that you have thousands of fonts and many different ways to distinguish your designs from the rest with great typography. There are incredible stock image sites today. You have sites like unsplash providing free images and various sites where you can buy original pics for pretty cheap.

Just as flat design seemed too simplistic at first (compared to Skeuomorphic design) and some people thought it might not work, this might feel the same way. But I think if we all put our minds together, we can push this style of design pretty far and make awesome designs with just type, lines, and images.