One thing I enjoy about Ginkgo culture is our excessively creative use of emoji. Ginkgo emoji have taught me to express myself in ways I never would have thought possible. At the time of this writing, the Ginkgo Slack workspace has over 9000 custom emoji. Each one was crafted with love by a fellow coworker. What a time to be alive!
As a UX Designer here at Ginkgo, I have some authority to say what makes a good emoji (and what doesn’t.) I spend a lot of my professional time creating visuals to communicate ideas to a wider audience (check out my previous blog on abstraction and UX to learn more.) I’m writing this blog to help you make the freshest little Slack emoji you possibly can. It’s a great way to add some fun to your workday. If you haven’t tried it before I recommend giving it a go!
Types of images that read well small:
Faces - humans are really good at recognizing faces. It’s a deep-seeded evolutionary skill. If you upload a picture of a face, chances are it will probably be recognizable even at a small size.
Memes - memes are everywhere. We see them so much that we can recognize them even if the image size is small.
Cartoons - This simplified drawing style with dark outlines around shapes makes for images that read well at small sizes.
Single words - A lot of times people like to upload words as emoji. The best ones are always shorter in length. Also, try to upload images with bold fonts. Make sure there’s plenty of contrast between the color of the text and the color of the background.
[caption id="attachment_5455" align="aligncenter" width="381"] The bars don't look as nice![/caption]
Don’t know how to crop images into a square? I recommend Adobe Photoshop Express. It’s an easy-to-use, free tool that works in the browser.
[caption id="attachment_5456" align="aligncenter" width="370"] Erasing the background makes the Ginkgo logo look more professional.[/caption]
There are a number of free online tools that can remove backgrounds from photographs. I’ve gotten mixed results from trying out a few. Your best bet is to use Photoshop, but that’s a lot more complicated. The internet is full of great Photoshop tutorials if you want to dive in.
Shoot for names that are no more than 2-3 words
When the name is too long Slack will sometimes cut off the end, this is bad if the punchline was at the end
It’s helpful to put the most important word in the name first
Make sure to separate words with either underscores or dashes. Slack doesn’t let you upload names with spaces
If you mash all the words together the name is hard to read (e.g. thisishardtoread)
(Feature photo by Domingo Alvarez E on Unsplash)
Posted by Darek Bittner