59 Wildly Impractical Designs Nobody Needed, But Hey, At Least Someone Had Fun Making Them

Creativity is one of the most important qualities a designer can have. Knowing when to dial it back is a close second. Because as strange as it sounds, design can absolutely suffer from too much imagination.

To show you what we mean, we went over to the subreddit r/DesignDesign, where people share the most hilariously impractical creations on the internet. The pieces we found are all undeniably inventive, but actually using any of them is a completely different story. Scroll down and see for yourself.

#1 This Bench Looking Like A Book

#2 1960 Bmw Isetta

#3 This Is Probably The Funniest And Weirdest Washroom Sign

We interact with design every single day, whether we realize it or not. Everything around us was created by someone with a specific purpose in mind. From the chairs we sit on to the apps we use on our phones, all of it went through some kind of design process at some point.

The thing is, that process doesn’t always lead to great results. Sometimes things come out looking a bit off, and sometimes they end up so over-the-top that they become completely unusable.

#4 This Bread Knife In A Swiss Restaurant Has A Silhouette Of The Major Peaks In Switzerland

#5 Cat Spotlight

#6 The Look Of This Office Building

If you’re not a designer, it can be tough to explain exactly why something feels wrong. You might look at a poster on the street and be able to read everything on it, but something about it still bugs you. You know it doesn’t look right, you just can’t quite put your finger on the problem.

Well, there are actually specific principles that separate good design from bad. Robin Williams breaks down four of them in his book “The Non-Designer’s Design Book,” and they’re surprisingly easy to understand. Once you learn what they are, you start noticing them pretty much everywhere.

#7 Panthermobile

#8 Local Burger Place’s Graphic Menu

#9 Three Must Be A Reason Design People Are So Obsessed With Stairs

The first one is called proximity. The idea is simple: things that belong together should be placed near each other. When related items are grouped closely, they naturally form a visual unit, which makes everything easier to process.

Think about a restaurant menu where all the information is scattered around the page with no clear grouping. Your eyes would jump all over trying to figure out what goes with what. When everything is grouped properly, you can scan through it without any confusion at all.

#10 These Corner Windows

#11 Sets

#12 Having To Scan A Qr Code In Case Of Emergency

The next principle is alignment. Nothing on a page should feel like it was placed there randomly. Every element needs some kind of visual connection to the things around it. When items are properly aligned, even if they’re far apart, there’s an invisible line that ties them together and creates structure.

You’ve probably seen flyers or websites where the text and images seem to just be floating with no order at all. When everything lines up with intention, the whole piece instantly feels more put together.

#13 This Wavy Sidewalk Is More Fun And Less Practical

#14 This Whisky Glass

#15 Creature Cups

Then there’s repetition. This one means using the same visual elements consistently throughout a piece, like the same colors and fonts. It creates unity and makes everything feel like it belongs to the same family.

Imagine walking through a building where every floor has completely different signage with its own fonts and color scheme. It would feel messy and disorienting. Consistent signage throughout the whole building makes navigation easy and gives the place a much more professional feel. It also tells people that the design was done with care and thought.

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#16 Coffee Table With Bonus Mountain Range

#17 Seat

#18 This Speedometer

The last one is contrast. If two elements are supposed to be different from each other, they should be very different. Contrast is often what grabs your attention first and makes you actually want to look at something. It also helps organize information by making it clear what matters most.

Think about a remote control where every single button is the same size and color. You’d have to read the tiny label on each one just to find the volume. When the important buttons are bigger or a different color, you can find what you need instantly without even thinking about it.

#19 Cliff Cup

#20 Sunglasses, Mask, Face Shield

#21 Sweater That’s Also A Backpack

When you look at the over-designed creations in this list, you’ll probably notice that many of them break several of these principles at once. Sometimes the elements are spread so far apart that proximity goes completely out the window. Other times, alignment is all over the place, or there’s so much going on that nothing creates real contrast anymore.

Many of these pieces are undeniably creative on a technical level. The problem is that creativity without solid principles behind it tends to produce something that looks impressive at first glance but falls apart when you actually try to use it.

#22 The Pi Bike Or Picycle

#23 What Is Even The Goal Of The Photographer Here?

#24 Gosh

These four principles are far from the only ones out there. There are plenty of other guidelines and rules that go into truly good design. But proximity, alignment, repetition, and contrast give you a solid starting point for understanding why something works or why it doesn’t.

So next time you come across something that makes you tilt your head and wonder what went wrong, you’ll have a much better idea of what to look for.

#25 Man Ray Chess Set (1926)

#26 This Handrail

#27 Dangling A Toilet Above Another Toilet

#28 Chairs In Despair

#29 Create A Problem, Solve The Problem, Profit!

#30 Tp. Tpeach. Teace Peach

#31 This Is What Happens When You Let An Architect With Too Much Free Time Loose

#32 Bike Rack Looks Fallen Over And Only Useable On One Side

#33 LED Sign I Came Across On Amazon Today. 😀 Seeyouspa Cecowboy

#34 The Entire Hotel Room Lights Up When Someone Turns On The Bathroom Light

#35 This Bed Was Designed To Wreck My Shins At Night

#36 The Cup I Got At A Restaurant, Yes That Is Supposed To Be The Handle, Even The Waiter Was Struggling To Hold It

#37 This Teapot Is Very

#38 This Is Supposed To Be A Bathtub

#39 Because People Love Sitting On Bike Seats When They Don’t Have To

#40 Salt Lake City, Triple Decker Fireplace

#41 Rip White Shirts

#42 Glass Sink In A Hotel

#43 Open / Closed Door Sign

#44 A Watch That Doesn’t Tell Time, Minimal Dial Design For Mindfulness Lovers

#45 Traditional Ceramic Motifs Reimagined

#46 This Hotel Bathroom Art Is A Little Xcessive With The Expressiv

#47 Bike Rack That Prioritizes Form Over Function

#48 It’s Got Design In The Name!

#49 Who The Heck Invented This? The Most Uncomfortable Toilet I Ever Sat On And It Was A Luxury Hotel

#50 A Sink That… Sinks?

#51 A Perfectly Designed Balcony

#52 The “Anti-Diver”: A Design Rejected By Both Watch Purists And Professional Designers. Form Follows Vibe

#53 This Keyboard With Blurry Keycaps Made To Look Like Early 3D Video Game Graphics

#54 What In The World Is This Supposed To Say?

#55 It Looks Cool But Isn’t Great To Use

#56 Handrail With Gaps And Sharp Edges

#57 An Ad Inside The Gym To Get Coaching And Structure

#58 Meatball Plate By Gustav Westman X IKEA

#59 Single-Color Chess