Why gradients fell out of favor and why they're back
Flat design's rise in the early 2010s was a reaction against skeuomorphism's overuse of gradients to simulate physical depth — beveled buttons, leather textures, and 3D chrome effects. The solution was an overcorrection: all color became solid, all surfaces became flat. What's happening now is more nuanced. Gradients are being used not to simulate physicality but to express energy, warmth, and brand personality. The difference is intent: a gradient that adds atmospheric depth to a hero background is doing something different from a gradient that tries to make a button look pressable.
