Hey, I'm Hunter from Skillthrive and in this tutorial you'll design this mobile
savings app user interface in Sketch. In part 1, you'll create the first section
of the mobile app user interface by creating a blurred image section with a
gradient overlay. Then you'll add the section title and an easy menu icon to finish.
Hey, I'm Hunter from Skillthrive and welcome to the first lesson in this Sketch
app tutorial. If you remember on Skillthrive, be sure to download all the
assets for this course. If you're not a member, no worries, it's absolutely free
to join! There's a link in the description that will take you to a
registration page where you can join. Let's go ahead and get started and jump
into Sketch. The first thing I'm going to do is create an artboard, so "A" on
the keyboard. I'm going to drag out and create an artboard. Set the width to 414 and
I want to set the height to 953. Then click enter. Then click on this here
to rename the artboard. I'm going to name this something like "Saving App Screen 1."
Then I'm going to create the first section here, which is going to
be used to mask out the image of New York City. So, "R" on the keyboard to
bring up the rectangle tool. I'm going to draw a rectangle here at about 400
pixels high...there we go. Then turn off the border. I'm going to drag in this
New York City picture that I included in the course files. Position it somewhere
like this – I might make it a little smaller. Then I'm going
to select this rectangle and this picture layer. I'm wanting to mask this out.
I'm going to come and expand this, come back into my image, and add a gaussian
blur. I'm going to set this to 3 pixels, so something really subtle.
I'm going to come back into this as well and actually add a linear gradient fill.
When I click on fill, I can come over to this linear gradient and I'm going to add
another point here . Come to all three of
these points and set a hex code value so that hex code is going to be 000311.
Then we'll go ahead and copy that, command C, hit enter, and then want to set
this value to 0. Come into this point, paste that hex code, set this value to 30.
Then on this one, I'm going to paste it and then keep the value at 100, I'm going
to zoom out. I'm going to bring this zero point all the way to the top of this
image. I'm going to bring this one down, which is the 30, and on this one I want
it to be darker about right here. I want it to be that pure color, so
something like that looks good. The next thing I'm going to do is actually
just add the title here. So, "T" to bring up the text tool. I'm going to click, and the
text that I'm using is the Montserrat, which is a free Google font that I'll
include as well in the course files if you don't already have it. For this
title, what I'm going to do is use the Ultra Light. I'm going to have the color
set to a little bit of an off-white here. The size to 41 and the character to
1.4. Then go ahead and type in what we want to here, so "New York Trip."
Then I want this to be about 50 pixels from the top, it's about 30 for now.
Then about 30 from the left...alright, there we go.
Now what we want to do is to go ahead and create a shadow on this,
Let's go ahead and come into shadows here and on the color I'm going to set
an actual hex code here, which will be 7b7d8c.
Then go ahead and save this color down here in my color palette.
I'm going to set this to a little bit of a lower value here,
something like 30%. Then on the blur I want to turn that to 5.
Then I can actually add this to the color palette. Go ahead and delete this one because I don't
need to add that one. Alright, so there we go, this adds a really subtle shadow here.
The next thing I want to do is create the menu icon at the top, so to do that I
want to use the rounded rectangle tool. So, "U" on our keyboard to bring that
tool up. I'm going to drag this out, I want to turn off the border and on the fill.
I'm going to pick this down here, which is the "FA" all the way across.
On the width here, on the larger one, I want it to be set to 36 and I want the height to
be set to 4. I can go ahead and duplicate that by
holding alt and then dragging it down. Then set the width
on this one to 27. I want to line these up. There we go, 25.
I would do about 5 pixels from that one. Go ahead and select both
of these and command G to group those. I'm just going to name this "menu icon."
Then with that new grouping selected I'm going to come into shadow and I'm going
to just add this shadow here. Make sure that on the blur it's 5.
That's it for this first part of this tutorial. In next one, what
we're going to do is focus on the actual savings progress bar, which is going to
sit here in the center of this section. I'll go ahead and see you in that part of this tutorial.
In part two, you'll design the savings progress bar with shapes and learn a
handy trick using border gap and dash properties. Then you'll use the text tool
to design a savings amount and wrap up by creating a button with the rounded
rectangle tool. The first thing we do here is create a perfect circle, so hit "O"
to bring of the oval tool. Click, hold, shift, and drag to create a perfect circle.
Come over to our width here. I'm going to go ahead and set a predefined
number here to 340. Place it somewhere in the center, about right here looks good.
Then I'm going to hit "R" to bring up the rectangle tool. I'm using this to
create a mask in order to show only part of the circle that we want in order to
create the progress bar. Let's go ahead and draw out a rectangle here and
I'm going to do it a little bit past center. Center is about right here, and I'm
going to go a little bit past that to about a point right here. The part beneath
this is the part that I'm thinking about showing, so this part down here is
going to go away. The first thing we want to do is actually make sure we have the oval
on top of this rectangle. Then select both of these and then click mask.
Now you can see that we have just a part of the circle that we want to see.
We need to come into this mask and turn off the fill and then come back into this
oval and turn off the fill as well. Now we can just see that we have this border.
Then we come in to the border and set a color here. The color I want to use is
a really nice, bright green–here is the hex code. I'm going to set a
thickness to 8.5 and then want to come over and click on this gear icon.
If you've seen my last tutorial, this process will feel very similar.
The first I'm going to do is create a rounded edge. Then I'm going to
come into the gap here. This is a number that I am actually getting from
an equation, which is the diameter of the circle multiplied by PI, or 3.14.
I already did the math for you and that number is
is 1067.6. Then on dash I can enter a number anywhere from 1 to the value of
this gap in order to fill the border more or less. A number like 720 is
going to give me an a nice number here. Then in order to bring this over
more to the left I can come into rotate and move this over, so something like
this I think looks good. Now we can duplicate this, so
command C command V. On the bottom layer I can come into the oval and I can
pick a color here–this off-white that we've been using. I can set
this value to, let's say something like 3.5. I can drop down the alpha to 30.
Come into this gear icon and just go ahead and delete these values. Now you can
see that we get this nice, you know, kind of shows us the rest of the way
that we have until we hit our goal. Now let's go ahead and create
these circle points down here, which is going to break up
this graphic that we have here. To do that, I'm going to hit "O" again on my
keyboard. I want to hold shift, drag this out, and I'm going to actually set this to a
predefined width of 12 pixels. I'm going to turn off the fill and on the
thickness here. I'm going to set something like 3.5 and set the
color here to this off-white that we've been using. Then I want to click alt and
then drag this out. I'm going to go ahead and position this in a spot I think
looks good, something like that looks good, so that's about 35 from the edge, 50
from the bottom. Move this over two, move this over up two. Alright, so there we go.
I'm going zoom out to see how those look.
I think those look good. Let's go ahead and group these as well. Now what we can
do is we can create the dollar amount right here. So lets go ahead and hit "T" on
our keyboard. The first thing we're going to do is create the actual dollar sign.
I'm still using the same typeface, but on this one I'm going to
set a weight to extra light. I'm going to set a size to 32, and then I'm going
to type in a dollar sign here. Whoops, go ahead and set that back to extra light
and set that to 32. There we go. Then we can type in a dollar sign so that's its
own layer. Go ahead and hit "T" again to create a new one, which is going to
represent the dollar amount. On this one I'm going to use ultra light. I'm going
to set the size to 71 and I'm going to set the character here to 4.
Then type in a number here like 435. Move this over then we'll hit "T"
again. This is going to represent the cent amount. That's going to be ultra
light as well, but I'm going to drop the size down to 31. Let's go ahead and
keep the character, actually let's bump up the character to 7.75 and then type
in a number here like 65. Then I'm going to place it a little bit
off-center. I'm going to come up just a little bit, something like that I think.
Then maybe move both of these over from the dollar sign. Maybe bring
down the dollar sign just a little bit. Let's zoom out, get an idea what
that looks like. Alright, I think it looks pretty good.
Let's go ahead and group these together. I'm holding shift, I select
these, command G, and then I can just name this something like "amount." Then I
can just move this whole grouping in the center, something like 90 from the top of
this is what I think it looks good. The next thing I'm going to do is add
the contribute button. Let's go ahead now and zoom in and create the oval here,
or the rounded button. To do that, I'm going to use the rounded rectangle tool.
So, "U" again, drag this out. Let's go ahead and for this
set a button to 195 and set a height to 43. I'm going to turn off the fill, come
in to the border, and select this off-white. I'm going to increase the
thickness to 2, then I'm going to double click on this so we can edit the corners.
Then I'm going to select outside of this, hold, and then drag–that way I can
select all four corners. Then go ahead and just drag this all the way
over so we get perfectly rounded corners. Alright, I think that looks good.
Then we can go ahead and add the the text in here, which is going to say
"contribute." So "T" to bring up a text, click, and let's go ahead and keep this one–
actually change this one to the light. I'm going to set a size here to 20 and
I'm going to do the character at something like 1.4. Then in all caps,
I'm going to type in "contribute."
Go ahead and center this. Go ahead and group these, command G. Get an idea of
what the spacing looks like. Go ahead and center that. Alright, I think it looks good.
There's one more thing you want to do in this section and that's to
add a couple values down here in order to show, you know, this one is at zero
dollars and this amount over here is the goal amount. Again, "T" on our keyboard and
I'm going to click. I want to make this a lot smaller, probably something like 12.
I'm going to go ahead and type in something like zero and then like a dollar amount.
Move this over just a little bit, hold option to duplicate that, type
in a value here like 600. I have to make sure these are the same distance from
the bottom–29,29. Those are centered to about the edge of this. This one is the
center to that. Alright, so that looks good. That's everything for this
section. In the next one, we're going to focus on the next section, which is going
to be our recent transactions. I'll go ahead and see you in that one.
In part three, you'll design the recent transaction cards by using a combination
of shapes and text layers. In the last part of this tutorial what we're going
to do is create the recent transaction section down here at the bottom of this
app screen. The first I'm going to do is create a rectangle. Let's go ahead
and create a rectangle here for this section and go ahead and just fill this
entire white space. Turn off the border and on the fill I'm going to use that
color that we used to create the gradient from the first
part of this tutorial, which is this one here. Then we can go ahead and
make sure that's lined up. Let's go ahead and add a title here to this.
Click and type in "recent transactions." I'm going to double-click and select
this and I'm going to keep this at light, but go ahead and increase
this to a size of 22 and a character at 1.4 as well. Then we can
center this, something like this. I think 30 from the top of this is nice for now.
Then the next thing we want to do is create the transaction boxed elements.
To do that, I'm going to hit "R" on my keyboard to bring up the rectangle tool.
I'm going to click and drag this out and I'm going to set a width here to 350 and
a height to 80.
I'm going to come into the fill and I'm going to set the fill to this off-white,
but drop the opacity down to 30%. On the border, I'm going to set this to the
off-white as well but I'm going to keep that at a hundred percent. Then I'm
going to come in and select this to round the corners
just a little bit, not too much.
Then I'm going to duplicate this rectangle, so command C, command V and
then I'm going to drag this over. On this width, I'm going to set it to about
50 pixels. This is where we're going to put our date. On this one, on the
fill, I'm going to make sure that this is at 30% as well.
Let's go ahead now and create the date month and the date day.
To do that, I'm going to hit "T" to bring up the text tool and I'm going to keep this at
light, but drop down the size to 12 and the character I'm going to drop down
to 1. Then, in all caps, I'm going to just type in a month here, so "Jan" for
January. Go ahead and position this somewhere
like this. Hit "T" again so I can type in the date day. On this one, I want to
do ultra light and I'm going to set the size to 23 and the character to 1.4.
Go ahead and type in a number here, so 14. Go ahead and position that about
5 pixels from the date. Go ahead and select these three. I'm going to command
G. Go ahead and name this "date box" and then just do this as "date."
Now I can go ahead and up position these in the center. Let's go ahead and
zoom out and see what that looks like. I might move the date up just a little bit
and then select this. Alright, I think that looks good. Now what we
can do is create some information over here that the user can use as well.
Again, "T" on a keyboard to bring up the text tool. I'm going to use the weight
this time at light and then I want to just do size at 22 and the character I
want to leave at 1.4. I'm going to, in all caps, type in the word "saved."
It just kind of a gives the user the idea that this transaction is
actually saved towards their goal here that they're trying to achieve. Then I'm
going to create something underneath this, kind of information for the card
that was used to process this payment. I'm going to hit "T" again, click, and on this
one I'm going to do extra light. On the size I'm going to do something
a little smaller, something like 15 pixels and the character at 1.4 should be just fine.
Then, in all caps, I'm going to do "Visa" and then just some random numbers.
Zoom in and position these a little nicer. Go ahead and while these
are selected, command G. Let's go ahead and do grouping here. The last one to
do is create a number, so something similar to what I did up here. I want the dollar sign
to be of different sizes–give a little bit more variety to this part of the graphic.
To do that, let's go ahead and create the dollar sign. So, "T" again on our keyboard
and click. On this one, keep it at extra light, set the size
here to a little bit smaller, something like 17 pixels and the character at 1.4
should be fine. Let's go ahead and just do a dollar sign. That should be good for now.
Then "T" again. Let's go ahead and do the
dollar amount. On this one, I do ultra light and go ahead and bump this up to
38 and on the character I'm actually going to bump this up as well to 2.
Then type in a number here like 12. Then "T" again. I'm going to type
in the cent amount and on this one I'm going to do a weight of light.
Let's do a lot smaller, something like 17 and a character at 4. Then type in
the amount, something like 75. Now we can go ahead and play around with the
spacing here. I want to get an idea. I'm going to come up here and look at this.
so when I'm spacing this it's somewhat similar.
This is a little bit above center and then a little bit above–something like
that. Let's go ahead and select
these layers, command G, do something so we know what it is. Go ahead and space
this out somewhere nice. I think this is about 15 from that edge, so let's try
about 15 from this as well. I think if we zoom out here I might actually
move this in just a little bit.
Slide it up about 11 pixels from the side. Let's go ahead and actually move this card
down. Go ahead and actually select all of this,
command G, and name this card one and just turn
this off and on so we make sure we're on the right one. Now we can move this
whole thing down. Let's move it about
to 30 as well. Now what I can do is I can hold alt and drag these out and
duplicate these. Space them out 30 pixels from each other. Now what I'm going to
do is come through and just change all this information so it's a little bit
more varied. I'm going to speed through this so I'm not
boring you guys with some of the, you know, some of the same details, but you
guys will get an idea of how I can make some of the changes here to add a little more variety.
You guys can see how I went through and changed from those values just to
add a little bit more variety to this design. Looking at this from the
zoomed out view, I want to come and select all these cards. Before I select
them, let's make sure that we actually rename these so we know which ones they are.
Then once we are done renaming these, we can come in and just space them
out a little bit. Then once I space out. well we'll be done with this tutorial.
Let's go ahead and select these, move these down just a little bit.
Then I'm going to remove this vertical guide and just one final look
at this. Giving this one last look I think it looks it looks good.
The spacing looks nice on all the elements here. Let's go ahead and
wrap this one up. Congrats on finishing this course! If you liked it, please
give it a thumbs up and subscribe. If you haven't already, become a free member
so you can download these course files, including the sketch file that I built
today. Again, I'm Hunter from Skillthrive and I'll see you in the next one.

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