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Genderless design is a myth

August Tang
UX Collective
Published in
6 min readFeb 11, 2022
“Genderfluid,” centered and typeset with unusually stretched, bright-blue letters. Overlaid on a gradient pink to white gradient.
The future is genderfluid

Beyond universal design

Diagram of three examples. Far left: Design for the norm, depicting a black circle encompassing a few white circles on the inner boundary and a few circles excluded outside the boundary. Middle: Design for everyone, one large black circle with many circles included within. Right: Design for the pluriverse, collage of four large, overlapping, colorful circles with several small colorful circles floating within.
Designing for the pluriverse diagram, based on a reference by Mauricio Mejía

Genderless design is a myth

Two images side by side, left depicting a masculine presenting individual standing—they are wearing a short sleeve brown sweater, black, loose-fitting slacks, and Adidas samba sneakers. Right depicting a feminine presenting individual lounging on a stool—they are wearing a long necklace, baggy white t-shirt with an oversize burnt orange sweater. Additionally, they have on the same black, loose-fitting slacks and Adidas samba sneakers that the left individual has on.
I and Me’s Better With U Collection

How gender presentation shows up in design

A bold, geometric, black-background design. There is a dominant block of text in bright white text stating, “GENDER STEREOTYPES FIND THEIR WAY INTO DESIGN WHETHER WE LIKE IT OR NOT,” in all caps. Layered behind the text block is a bright blue half circle, bleeding off the edge of the image. Opposing the text is a series of bright red triangles repeated (almost teeth like), jutting out from the right edge of the image, pointing at the text.
Art direction example for masculinity
A pale pink, minimal image with a decorative, contemporary serif typeface, featuring the statement “Masculinity as default is more widely accepted than femininity as default.” Above this center-aligned statement is a delicate starburst. The entire quote is framed by two thin, light gray hand-drawn lines, one positioned in the upper lefthand corner and the other in the lower righthand corner.
Art direction example for femininity

How to deconstruct the gender binary in design

Scan of a colorful book spread. The background is a pastel gradient transitioning from a blue left edge to a purple right edge. The type layout is very dynamic and includes a large featured text block constrained within a distinct column, along with handwritten text that is scattered across the pages and disregards the grid. On the right side of the spread, there is large rainbow text and 3 staggered images of cats, with hand-drawn rainbow overlays of clouds, hearts, sparkles, and flowers.
Sample spread from the book design for Be Gay Do Crime
Scan of a colorful book spread. The background is a pastel gradient transitioning from a pink left edge to an orange right edge. The type layout is very dynamic and includes four large featured text blocks constrained within a distinct column, along with handwritten text that is scattered across the pages and disregards the grid.
Another sample spread from the book design for Be Gay Do Crime

The future of design is genderfluid

Written by August Tang

August (they/them) is a queer, trans, nonbinary leftist and abolitionist. Design Lead at Work & Co.

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