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Diploma in UI Designing Course

Learn the skills to create stunning and user-friendly interfaces for websites and mobile applications with our comprehensive UI Designing course.

In this hands-on course, you’ll learn the fundamental principles of UI design, including color theory, typography, layout, and user experience (UX). You’ll also have the opportunity to practice your skills by designing real-world projects, from wireframes to high-fidelity prototypes.

By the end of the course, you’ll have a strong foundation in UI design and be able to create attractive, intuitive, and functional
interfaces that meet the needs of your users.

What you’ll learn – Course Objective :

  • Fundamentals of UI design, including color theory, typography, layout, and UX
  • Best practices for creating wireframes and prototypes
  • Techniques for designing interfaces for websites and mobile applications
  • Tools and techniques for creating custom icons and graphics
  • How to conduct user research and test your designs to ensure they meet the needs of your users

Who this course is for:

• Aspiring UI designers
• Web developers who want to improve their design skills
• Anyone interested in learning how to create attractive and
 user-friendly interfaces
• Student
• Housewives
• Businessman
Free Demo Demolancer
• Graphic Designer
• Computer Training Seeker

Advance tools & Technology Certified Qualified Experienced Trainer’s

A. UI design tools

  • Adobe Photoshop.
  • Adobe Illustrator

B. Interactive prototyping tools

  •  Mockplus
  • Sketch 

C. Web development tools

  • Dreamweaver
  • FrontPage
  •  Sublime Text
Diploma in UI Designing Course

Ui Designing course curriculum

Practical, structured, and updated industry current standards.

Module 1 — Design fundamentals

Colour theory, typography, visual hierarchy, spacing and layout principles. You’ll understand why good design feels effortless and learn to train your eye for quality.


Module 2 — User research and empathy mapping

How to study your users before you design anything. Interviews, surveys, personas, and journey mapping — the groundwork that separates a guess from a decision.


Module 3 — Wireframing and prototyping

Low-fidelity sketches, mid-fidelity digital wireframes, and clickable prototypes. You’ll practice rapid ideation and learn to present your thinking clearly to clients and teams.


Module 4 — Figma (hands-on)

The industry’s most in-demand design tool. Auto-layout, components, design systems, interactive prototypes, and collaborative design — all covered with live project work.


Module 5 — Adobe XD and other tools

Adobe XD for additional workflows, along with an introduction to InVision and Zeplin for developer handoff. You’ll know how to work within any design environment.


Module 6 — Responsive design and mobile-first thinking

Designing for every screen size — from mobile to desktop. Grid systems, breakpoints, and accessibility basics so your designs actually work for real users.


Module 7 — Portfolio building and live projects

You’ll work on real briefs and build a portfolio of 4–6 complete case studies. This is what gets you hired — a portfolio that shows process, not just pretty pictures.

Ui Designing

Web Designing Principles

Balance – It’s important for web designers to create a balanced layout. In web design we refer to heavy (large and dark colors) and light (small and lighter colors) elements. Using the correct proportion of each is critical to achieving a balanced website design.
Contrast – In color theory, contrasting colors are ones placed opposite one another on the color wheel (see also complementary colors). Web design offers a few other areas where contrast is applicable. Designers look at contrasting sizes, textures and shapes to define and draw attention to certain sections of the website.
Emphasis – We touched on this a bit when discussing contrast. Emphasis is a design principles founded in the intentional “highlighting” of certain important elements of the website layout. It’s important to note that if you emphasize everything on the page you end up emphasizing nothing. Imagine a page in a book where 80% of the content is highlighted in yellow…does anything really stand out? This is the time to take a look at that Information Architecture for direction.
Consistency – Also called repetition or rhythm, consistency is a critical web design principle. For example, clean and consistent navigation provides the best user experience for your website visitors.
• Unity – Unity is the relationship between the various parts of the website layout and the composition as a whole. Based in the Gestalt theory, unity deals with how the human brain visually organizes information WebTech grouping elements into categories.