page.title=Icon Design Guidelines excludeFromSuggestions=true parent.title=UI Guidelines parent.link=index.html @jd:body
New Guides for App Designers!
Check out the new documents for designers at Android Design, including more guidelines for Iconography.
Creating a unified look and feel throughout a user interface adds value to your product. Streamlining the graphic style will also make the UI seem more professional to users.
This document provides information to help you create icons for various parts of your application’s user interface that match the general styles used by the Android 2.x framework. Following these guidelines will help you to create a polished and unified experience for the user.
The following documents discuss detailed guidelines for the common types of icons used throughout Android applications:
To get started creating your icons more quickly, you can download the Android Icon Templates Pack.
The Android Icon Templates Pack is a collection of template designs, textures, and layer styles that make it easier for you to create icons that conform to the guidelines given in this document. We recommend downloading the template pack archive before you start designing your icons.
The icon templates are provided in the Adobe Photoshop file format (.psd), which preserves the layers and design treatments we used when creating the standard icons for the Android platform. You can load the template files into any compatible image-editing program, although your ability to work directly with the layers and treatments may vary based on the program you are using.
You can obtain the latest Icon Templates Pack archive using the link below:
Download the Icon Templates Pack for Android 4.0 »
For previous versions of the Icon Templates Pack, see the Downloads section in the box at the top-right corner of this page.
Android is designed to run on a variety of devices that offer a range of screen sizes and resolutions. When you design the icons for your application, it's important keep in mind that your application may be installed on any of those devices. As described in the Supporting Multiple Screens document, the Android platform makes it straightforward for you to provide icons in such a way that they will be displayed properly on any device, regardless of the device's screen size or resolution.
In general, the recommended approach is to create a separate set of icons for each generalized screen density. Then, store them in density-specific resource directories in your application. When your application runs, the Android platform will check the characteristics of the device screen and load icons from the appropriate density-specific resources. For more information about how to store density-specific resources in your application, see Resource directory qualifiers for screen size and density.
For tips on how to create and manage icon sets for multiple densities, see Tips for Designers.
Here are some tips that you might find useful as you develop icons or other drawable assets for your application. The tips assume that you are using Adobe Photoshop or a similar raster and vector image-editing program.
Try to name files so that related assets will group together inside a directory when they are sorted alphabetically. In particular, it helps to use a common prefix for each icon type. For example:
Asset Type | Prefix | Example |
---|---|---|
Icons | ic_ |
ic_star.png |
Launcher icons | ic_launcher |
ic_launcher_calendar.png |
Menu icons and Action Bar icons | ic_menu |
ic_menu_archive.png |
Status bar icons | ic_stat_notify |
ic_stat_notify_msg.png |
Tab icons | ic_tab |
ic_tab_recent.png |
Dialog icons | ic_dialog |
ic_dialog_info.png |
Note that you are not required to use a shared prefix of any type — doing so is for your convenience only.
Supporting multiple screen densities means you must create multiple versions of the same icon. To help keep the multiple copies of files safe and easier to find, we recommend creating a directory structure in your working space that organizes asset files per resolution. For example:
art/... ldpi/... _pre_production/... working_file.psd finished_asset.png mdpi/... _pre_production/... working_file.psd finished_asset.png hdpi/... _pre_production/... working_file.psd finished_asset.png xhdpi/... _pre_production/... working_file.psd finished_asset.png
This structure parallels the density-specific structure in which you will ultimately store the finished assets in your application's resources. Because the structure in your working space is similar to that of the application, you can quickly determine which assets should be copied to each application resources directory. Separating assets by density also helps you detect any variances in filenames across densities, which is important because corresponding assets for different densities must share the same filename.
For comparison, here's the resources directory structure of a typical application:
res/... drawable-ldpi/... finished_asset.png drawable-mdpi/... finished_asset.png drawable-hdpi/... finished_asset.png drawable-xhdpi/... finished_asset.png
Many image-editing programs such as Adobe Photoshop allow you to use a combination of vector shapes and raster layers and effects. When possible, use vector shapes so that if the need arises, assets can be scaled up without loss of detail and edge crispness.
Using vectors also makes it easy to align edges and corners to pixel boundaries at smaller resolutions.
Because you will need to create assets for different screen densities, it is best to start your icon designs on large artboards with dimensions that are multiples of the target icon sizes. For example, launcher icons are 96, 72, 48, or 36 pixels wide, depending on screen density. If you initially draw launcher icons on an 864x864 artboard, it will be easier and cleaner to tweak the icons when you scale the artboard down to the target sizes for final asset creation.
If you scaled an image up from a bitmap layer, rather than from a vector
layer, those layers will need to be redrawn manually to appear crisp at higher
densities. For example if a 60x60 circle was painted as a bitmap for
mdpi
it will need to be repainted as a 90x90 circle for
hdpi
.
Although the Android SDK tools will automatically compress PNGs when packaging application resources into the application binary, a good practice is to remove unnecessary headers and metadata from your PNG assets. Tools such as OptiPNG or Pngcrush can ensure that this metadata is removed and that your image asset file sizes are optimized.
Corresponding icon asset files for each density must use the same filename, but be stored in density-specific resource directories. This allows the system to look up and load the proper resource according to the screen characteristics of the device. For this reason, make sure that the set of assets in each directory is consistent and that the files do not use density-specific suffixes.
For more information about density-specific resources and how the system uses them to meet the needs of different devices, see Supporting Multiple Screens.