A review by agentfin
Design for Hackers: Reverse Engineering Beauty by David Kadavy

3.0

A book on reverse engineering beauty might most practically be read in reverse. This is one of few books where reading the last chapter first will not ruin the story, but in fact set the stage and fuel the necessary curiosity.

There are at least four books in here. Two on history [art and typography], one on graphic design in regards to the page, and another on color and aesthetics.

This book does its greatest service with its title. It calls for developers to learn the modicum of design theory, not to become designers, but to understand better why the designers they work with ate flipping out about a color choice or font rendering. This book is about gaining entry into a conversation. It is serving to give permission to inquire.

Kadavy, as one who spans the gap already between design and programming, struggles at times with glossing over concepts that need more explanation. The visual side by sides of page layouts can be daunting as the leaps made to improve layout are so dramatic as to seem magic. Likewise with typography, the subtleties of fonts argue against their own importance because they are so hard to see.

But, the frustrations with this book do serve. Those who read it will gain vision into the vastness of design, and hopefully in this realization of how much there is to learn, continue. If nothing else, the section on color is a delightful primer for artist and designer alike, opening up the box of Hexidecimals and the full 'gamut' of what color can be.