Icons look pretty good, always grateful for free stuff like this.<p>Minor side: the first thing I typed into the filter box was "save" because I wanted to see how the designer thought about the whole "floppy disk == save" problem in a greenfield icon set. I thought it was even more remarkable (or just notable, I guess) that there's no Save icon at all, which really speaks to where the world is at around cloud-based web apps.<p>Why require someone to click Save at all, right?
Please though, if you ever use these (or any icons, frankly), PLEASE accompany the icons with text so my aging parents -- and heck, me too -- know what they mean.<p>All too often I am helping my family members navigate UIs that are "clean" yes (plenty of whitespace! too much) but with icons that hide everything and don't mean anything.<p>"Oh, to send it to your daughter? Click the 3 lines in the top right corner, then click the two lines joined by a circle. Er, the one that looks like a chart. Yeah, that means 'share' apparently. You just have to know that."<p>I kind of miss the days when software didn't change so much and came with instruction manuals.
Looks pretty neat<p>Though I'm always afraid of using icon sets (especially for a big product) because if I couldn't find an icon I need then sometimes it's not that easy to find this icon from another source with similar styling
Thanks, I love me some icons. Looks like it could work well stylistically along side those also using Github's recently redesigned octicons (<a href="https://primer.style/octicons" rel="nofollow">https://primer.style/octicons</a>)
I've used <a href="https://ikonate.com/" rel="nofollow">https://ikonate.com/</a>, and this service looks pretty similar and of equal quality if not better.<p>> <i>Use how you want, without attribution</i><p>This license reminded me of Sam Hocevar's [0] <i>do whatever the fuck you want</i> license [1].<p>[0] Probably one of the first to advocate DNS based ad-blocking way back in <i>2002</i>: <a href="http://sam.zoy.org/writings/internet/doubleclick.html" rel="nofollow">http://sam.zoy.org/writings/internet/doubleclick.html</a><p>[1] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WTFPL" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WTFPL</a>
Maybe it's just my particular setup, but these icons look blurry to me, especially when you mouse over them. It looks as if there is no antialiasing. I'm on Ubuntu with Firefox for whatever it's worth.<p>Other than that they look like nice icons and this is a nice effort.
Looks good! Push left vs. push right icons are inconsistent though. The "push left" icon makes sense (arrow pushing on a line), but the "push right" icon is more like a <i></i>pull<i></i> right icon. The line needs to be shifted to the other side of the arrow.