Best Daily Design Challenges for Logo Designers, UI/UX, and Graphic Designers

June 14, 2023 (updated) - By August van de Ven

Start daily design challenge: FakeClients.com/dailybrief

Starting a daily design challenge is a great way to brush up on your design skills and expand your knowledge on design. You’ll get used to working according to a design brief and build up a portfolio in the meanwhile. It’s also a great way to build up a following on social media sites like Instagram, YouTube, or Dribbble when you showcase your progress by posting a design every day.

FakeClients Daily Briefs

The easiest way of doing a daily design challenge is by starting one that sends the design challenges straight to your email inbox every day. Doing a design challenge this way, rather than picking a challenge for yourself every day, helps you stick to the challenge while ensuring that the randomness of the daily prompts ensures that it truly is a challenge.

In order to start this daily design challenge, go to FakeClients.com/dailybrief, create an account, select your preferred category, and press 'Start receiving daily briefs'. You can subscribe to as many categories as you wish and, if you prefer a more realistic challenge, you can upgrade to FakeClients Pro to subscribe to the more detailed daily briefs. The great thing about the FakeClients daily brief challenge is that it will continue sending you daily briefs until you unsubscribe. This means that you can choose the length of your challenge yourself and can stop it at any time.
FakeClients.com/dailybrief

FakeClients Design Challenges

Besides the daily design challenge, FakeClients also has a design brief generator that you can also use for your daily design challenge. Set a clear set of days you’ll be doing the challenge for and then use the FakeClients generator each day to generate a unique design brief for that day. FakeClients provides design briefs for logo designers, graphic designers, web designers, UI designers, UX designer, and illustrators so most creatives can use the generator to practice.

Most people that fail a daily design challenge will have had difficulties staying consistent. This is the main reason why so many people stop their design challenge after only a few days. It is important to set realistic goals for yourself. Don’t start out doing a 365-day daily design challenge because you’ll probably not make it if you’re just starting out. Start by doing a 7-day challenge and see where you can go from there. You also have to create incentives for yourself. Set a daily alarm to remind yourself of the challenge, put it on your calendar but also tell your friends and followers. They will help you stay accountable which will make the chance that you actually finish the challenge much greater.

FakeClients.com

Written Briefs for Design Challenges

Another great way of doing a daily design challenge is by using written briefs. You can also find these briefs on FakeClients at FakeClients.com/Briefs. These briefs are an excellent way of practicing design as these briefs look just like a briefs you'd receive from a real client. They go more in-depth, are a lot more detailed than the generated briefs, and even have visual reference material in some cases. Especially for the more experienced designers, these written briefs may be a better way of practicing design as you're likely already pretty used to designing for different clients and having to work according to all the client's wishes and demands.

To try out these briefs, simply go to FakeClients.com/Briefs. At the top of the page, you can specify your field of work to view all the briefs that you can work on. After that, simply pick a brief and try to work on it as if it was a real client. While these briefs are great for doing a design challenge, you'll have to spend a lot more time on them as the client's wishes are much more specific. With the shorter, generated briefs you have a lot more room to freely interpret the fake client's wishes which may make them better practice material for a daily challenge. You could, however, decide to use the written briefs to start a weekly design challenge to give yourself more time to work on each design.

FakeClients.com/Briefs

LogoCore Thirty Day Logo Challenge

LogoCore also provides an excellent thirty-day logo design challenge. While duration of the challenge is shorter than most of the daily design challenges in this list, its briefs are very high quality and realistic. Some even provide visual references. This daily design challenge is great for beginning designers as you can get feedback and help from their discord community and they will even post your work in some cases to help you build a following as a designer.

Logocore.com/logo-challenge

Daily UI Design Challenge

Daily UI currently is one of the most well-known daily design challenges out there. They have over 100,000 designers that have already signed up for the challenge and claim to have had designers from companies like Disney, Netflix, Microsoft, Airbnb, and many more big businesses sign up for their daily design challenge.

Daily UI challenges are also extremely popular on social media platforms like Instagram. Be sure to share them on there because as said before, it's a great way to build a following of people interested in your work. It will also help you stay consistent as most social media platforms reward users that post consistently with more exposure.

dailyui.co

The Daily Logo Challenge

The Daily Logo Challenge is a design challenge specifically aimed at logo design. It’s a free challenge that gets sent to your inbox and lasts for 50 days. The challenge is not as popular than the Daily UI challenge but The Daily Logo Challenge has its own hashtag with over 60.000 posts so the community is still very active.

dailylogochallenge.com

Dribbble Design Challenges

Dribbble, of course, isn’t really a daily design challenge but because so many users are sharing their daily design challenge work on Dribbble, you can create great challenges for yourself. You simply look up daily design posts on Dribbble, use the same subject as the Dribbble posters, and even use the post as inspiration or reference to practice on it.

Dribbble.com

Redesigning existing brands

You’ve probably come across your fair share of bad logo designs in your life. Whenever you walk through a busy street with a lot of stores and people, there are so many logos that you probably don’t even notice most of them. Many of these logos don't look that great. A great daily design challenge is to look for these badly designed logos and try to redesign them. It is probably a bit harder than just coming up with a business to design something for because these businesses already exist. Think about their mission, clients, and goals and what type of design might work best for them. You can also do this if you’re a web designer, for example. Visit businesses' websites and look for ones you can improve. If you’re doing a good job, you can even send them your designs and there’s a fair chance they’ll like them as well and they may even hire you for your services.

Design Jobs

Another great way to get some inspiration for design exercises is to look for design jobs. There are many sites that let people post their design jobs like “Design a logo for X brand” which can help you practice. Just start designing as if these people were your clients and pick a new job each day. This way you won’t only get used to the process of design but you’ll also get some experience working for clients even though they aren’t really your clients. You can even send them your work if you're happy with it and offer it to them. They’ll may like that you took the time and could even ask you for future jobs.

Other Design Challenges to Help you Practice Specific Skills

Most of the above design challenges focus on you working on a specific prompt or brief to practice design. Of course, this is a great way to practice your design skills and build up a strong portfolio, but it can get quite boring after a while. Below is a short list of some design challenges that are fun exercises to try out to test your skills.

Pixel Guesser

In this exercise, you can test your sense of pixels by trying to draw a rectangle and come as close to the prompted size. To try out this challenge, simply press the play button to go to this exercise and press start to start the challenge. After that, you can draw a rectangle and try to get as close to the prompted size as you can! Try to get the lowest possible score by getting as close to the prompted size as possible.

Font Quiz

If you have worked with a lot of fonts during your design career, this challenge will probably be quite easy for you but if you haven't, this is a great way to get to know more fonts. In this challenge, you're given 10 font names that you have to correctly match to the actual font. Try to get the highest possible score by correctly guessing as many fonts as you can!

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