We have an ongoing discussion here at ZURB: if you were going to be trapped on a desert island, what ten ingredients would you want to have? Put another way, what could you eat for the rest of your life? In an effort to be as minimal as possible I went with cows, wheat and raspberries: that covers milk, cheese, bread, steak and...well berries. Everything else would just be a bonus.
In that same vein: what if you could only have five tools to design with? If your entire design career from now forward could only include five tools, what would they be?
Paper
Of course. Paper is an incredibly versatile design tool. You can
sketch on it to create fast, clear wireframes. You can prototype interactions with it, or show
how to use a complex tool. Failing all of that, you can make
awesome paper figures...you are stuck on a desert island, after all.
Sharpies
Sharpies and paper go together like...well, like Sharpies and paper. They're made for each other. At ZURB we love designing with a
stack of ZURB sketch paper and a fistful of Sharpies. Sharpies let you get your thoughts down in quick, broad strokes that
keep you from getting hung up on the details.
If I can cheat a little I'd bring sharpies as well as a sharpie pen, highlighter and letraset grey marker – my preferred set of sketching tools. If I can't cheat then standard Sharpies will do just fine.
Photoshop
Alright granted, the rest of these assume I have a computer but hey – ZURB post, ZURB rules. If it helps we can pretend we're stranded on a desert island with a computer built in.
Photoshop may be clichA' but it's an incredibly powerful tool for designers. Here at ZURB we use it for our visual designs, both for our clients as well as our internal tools. We've used Photoshop to dress up printed reports we deliver (like site audits) as well as to create most of the individual graphical elements we use in implementation.
Coda
Coda is a great web design IDE by Panic. It has a polished (though not perfect) UI, supports site synchronization and SVN integration and is a pretty good text editor to boot. Coda stays open on my machine pretty much all day every day with a few different sites open. Don't give Dreamweaver the time of day if you can get your hands on Coda.
iTunes
Okay, maybe this isn't a design tool but at ZURB we need our music to keep going through the day. Jeremy had
a post about this not long ago. Whether it's Mark cranking anything from Michael Jackson to
Lonely Island or Ryan's bizarre electronica or my
half-punk,
half-german metal playlists we've got music playing just about every minute we're here. You won't catch me on a desert island designing without some tunes.
That's my list. You're heading off to a desert island – what tools are you gonna take?