


When OS X first appeared its fruit-colored, liquid capsule buttons kicked off the massive Aqua design fad. Like a monsoon everything from Websites to icons and paperweights to drinking glasses poured down from every corner of the graphic communications industries. Suddenly brightly-colored liquid designs were everywhere.
A similar but smaller trend of brushed aluminum designs rushed ahead of the OS X “Panther” interface.

Since its inception, OS X has been the pinnacle of user interface styling. With its clean, simple buttons, dialog boxes, and the superior graphic engine fueling them, it’s no wonder the Mac’s user interface design has become with each iteration a new and powerful influence on its biggest market—designers.
Now, even as the Mac community holds its breath for the next major Mac operating system update, codenamed “Tiger,” it is not OS X that inspires the latest design trend. The spark for thousands of user interfaces, websites, and even in-production industrial products is OS X’s chief competitor: Microsoft Windows.
Considered the most significant upgrade since Microsoft released the 32-bit Windows95 operating system, the as-yet-unreleased next version of Windows, codenamed “Longhorn,” is inspiring imaginations in both Windows-based designers and Mac-based. Loosely based on Longhorn’s interpretation, the so-called Aero style abounds on computer and Website user interfaces—everything from navigation systems to desktop clocks, icons, log-in screens, and other “skins.”
Typically charcoal and white, the Aero style simulates glass and glass-mounted objects floating in three-dimensional space, casting a drop shadow on objects beneath them, including desktops and backgrounds. Simple, sleek, and elegant, Aero is all the rage.
Creating Aero is simple, and, if done right, extremely flexible. Here’s how.
In Photoshop 7 or CS (we’ll use CS for this tutorial) begin a new document of suitable
size. Either set the background to a color (i.e. not transparent, white, or a shade of black), or fill it with a
colorful image. I started with a document 430 x 308 px.



Now you have the basis for any Aero style design. The only thing left is to add some Aero type.

That’s all there is to making the Aero style!
From here, you have numerous customization options. By using vector shapes rather than drawing with the Marquee tools and painting in areas, shapes can be resized infinitely without loss of quality—if you resize rounded corner boxes unproportionately, just remember to reset their corner radii to avoid distortion. You can also create white boxes in addition to, or in place of, charcoal boxes.
Since Layer Styles dynamically adapt to the size and shape of their layer’s content, the styles we applied will always work. Though you may need to tweak the style settings for different types, sizes, and shapes of objects. Experiment!
Though Aero interface elements like the boxes we created are strictly glass, charcoal, and white, subtle usage of color can really make your designs pop—note the second hand in the clock above. Think of the outter box as a glass container, which can only hold other containers. Inner containers can be charcoal, white, or more glass, and they can hold any type of object—text, graphics, etc.—set in any color.
To see how I built the clock, or to get a little more hands on with this tutorial, download my PSD project file (2.59 MB).
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