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Your 5 Best Bets for Open Source Design Software for UX & UI

designer using computer software

Last Updated 10 November, 2021

How much did you pay for design software last year? $100? Maybe $1,000? And don’t forget about that vendor ecosystem you’re now inextricably tied to.

If you’re getting tired of mounting fees and proprietary systems, then it’s time to try the newest crop of open source design software.

Wait, Free and Open Source Software for Design?

Yup. Free and Open Source Software (or FOSS for short) has been around for a couple decades. But the design world hasn’t always gotten much love. Believe it or not, “Design programs made by volunteer developers” was not an easy sell to folks who value aesthetics and usability.

But now, the game has changed. While prim and polished apps have been busy optimizing their pricing plans, open source has been optimizing value. Open source has been catching up.

These days, free and open source design applications are a great way for new designers to hone their skills with zero overhead. Even seasoned veterans are expanding their knowledge set, and contributing back to the open source community.

The best part is that open source design programs often work great as stand-alone tools, or alongside existing design stack. Open source software tends to be more platform agnostic. So many times, it’s even available on all major operating systems.

From solo designers to employees, promising new open source alternatives are everywhere. There has been no better time than now to try open source software in your design workflow.


Article Contents


Your Best Options for Open Source Design Tools

This article picks out your best options for open source UX and U design software, selected through first-hand research and experimentation. There’s a little something for everyone. Professionals in UX, UI, digital product design, visual design and web design all have open source alternatives to check out.

Every design tool listed here is completely free and open source. In no particular order…

The Pencil Project

Best Uses: UX, Interactive Prototyping

Comparable to: a cross somewhere between Axure, XD, and InVision Studio

Available Platforms: Mac, Windows, Linux (Ubuntu & Fedora)

the pencil project's free and open source design software for designing ux prototypes
Pencil can create detailed interactive prototypes with its ‘collections’ component libraries.

Development for the Pencil Project started in 2015, but slowed around June 2017. Fast-forward to the major release of version 3.1 in Oct 2019 and the Pencil Project is competitive once again. Sure it’s been a bit since the last big release, but the Pencil Project is still some amazingly powerful software for creating interactive prototypes. It comes with libraries (called collections) of built-in components, and lets you import additional libraries from fellow Pencil enthusiasts.

Alva

Best Uses: Web Design, Interactive Prototyping with actual code libraries

Comparable to: Zeplin, Sketch+Sketch2react, InVision DSM+Bit

Available Platforms: Mac, Windows, Linux

Alva blurs the line between design and development by using actual code libraries.

Alva promises the ability to create living interactive prototypes with actual code components. Basically, you connect a react library to the app and then pull in that library’s components to create designs and add interactions.

Akira

Best Uses: UX, UI, Product Design, Visual Design, Web Design

Comparable to: Sketch

Available Platforms: Linux (sorry mainstreamers)

akira is free and open source design software with a comparable interface to bohemian coding's sketch
Having a free and open source alternative to Sketch on Linux is extremely exciting.

Currently in active development, Akira is vector design software specially created for Linux operating systems. It looks to be the open source answer to digital-first vector design programs like Sketch. The GitHub page still sports its ‘early development’ stage warning, but Akira’s developers have made it easier to download and install the Alpha release. You can find Akira on the elementaryOS App Center, FlatHub, the Snapcraft Store, and of course Akira’s official GitHub page.

Inkscape

Best Uses: UI, Visual Design, Graphic Design

Comparable to: Illustrator

Available Platforms: Mac, Windows, Linux

Inkscape offers many of the powerful features designers have become reliant on.

Inkscape is a direct free and open source alternative Adobe Illustrator. The short tutorial above should give you a rough idea of what it’s capable of. The key shortcuts take some time adjusting too, and the interface isn’t quite as polished as Illustrator. That being said, Inkscape is an incredibly powerful tool. And it’s amazing that it’s free. Inkscape can open Illustrator files (.ai) and saves to a cross-platform format (.svg) by default. Because Inkscape is a replacement for Illustrator, it works just as well for graphic design as it does for web design, UX and UI.

GIMP

Best Uses: Photo Editing, UI, Visual Design, Graphic Design

Comparable to: Photoshop

Available Platforms: Mac, Windows, Linux

Pixel pushers will be pleasantly impressed with GIMP’s vast array of features.

The GNU Image Manipulation Program (aka GIMP) the open source answer to Adobe Photoshop. Like Inkscape, GIMP is a straight replacement for a popular Adobe tool. In this case, Adobe’s photo editor Photoshop. Most commonly used for editing photos, creating banners and generally working in pixels, GIMP is another open source alternative that works for graphic designers and for Web Designers and UI Designers. This versatility makes it a great addition to your arsenal of open source design software.

Free Open Source Design Software: a Promising Alternative

Avoiding Vendor Lock-In

For professional designers, vendor lock-in is a real problem. With the advent of SaaS and monthly pricing structures, one-time software purchases have become rare. And the file types are often proprietary.

The subscription pricing model hasn’t come without its advantages. For one, the average release frequency of our favorite digital design tools have dramatically increased.

It’s also worth noting that not all modern design software fall neatly into either the ‘free’ or ‘exorbitantly expensive’ categories. Some companies have found creative ways to give pricing control to their consumers (in this case, designers) while still making responsible profits. These rare cases like Sketch allow one-time purchases, and offer optional ongoing fees for ongoing support and releases. Others like Figma are growing in popularity using a freemium pricing model.

But this is uncommon. Most vendors offer monthly pricing only, with the option to lower your monthly bill by agreeing to year-long subscriptions. In these cases, it’s common to have a freemium product designed to get you embedded into their ecosystem. Then before you know it, you’re hooked.

By the time you’ve bundled, expanded, and free-trialed yourself into oblivion, you’re stuck with fine-print agreements and sizable cancellation fees.

UX Design’s Open Source Alternatives

Free and open source software provides design professionals with a viable alternative to the overpriced marketplace. An alternative where we are all users and contributors.

And how often do you get to be the target user of your product while you design it?

On a fundamental level, open source shares many ideals with the design process: clear communication, cooperation, and innovation. Not only that, open source gives us an opportunity to sharpen our skills by working with developers and learning open source models.

The rewards for contributing? You get to use software that not only works, but also helped build.

Software that helps you do your work better.

Did I miss something? Did you try one of these design software programs? What did you think? Let me know in the comments below!

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