How to Create a Detailed Lighthouse Flat Icon in Affinity Designer

Final product image
What You’ll Be Creating

In this tutorial we’ll go through the process of creating a lighthouse icon in a trendy flat style using Affinity Designer. We’ll be using simple shapes, such as rectangles and ellipses, and manipulating them with Boolean Operations to transform the shapes. Let’s start!

1. Create
the Base of the Lighthouse

Step 1

First of
all, let’s create a New Document of 600 x 600 px size.

Create New Document

Step 2

We’ll be
using a sketch of our future icon in order to make it easier to build composition
and pick the colors. Use the Place Image
Tool
in your Tools panel and
select your sketch in the pop-up folder window. Click Open and then click on
your workspace in order to place the sketch image at its default size. If you’re
confused about how to use some tool, you can always find descriptive tips and
instructions in the status text, which is located in the bottom panel of
Affinity Designer.

Now we can
rename our image as “Sketch” in the Layers
panel and lower its Opacity to 75%, making it more transparent
and less distracting. 

Place the Sketch and edit its Opacity

Step 3

Let’s start
from the body of our lighthouse. Make sure you have the Draw Persona selected in the area above the Tools panel. Take the Rectangle
Tool (M)
and form a shape above our sketch with black Stroke and no Fill. Click
the Convert to Curves button in the
upper context toolbar (the area below the Persona selectors). This way we have turned our rectangle into curves, and now we can edit its nodes separately.

Let’s make
the lower part of the lighthouse wider. Select the lower left node with the Node Tool (A), head to the Transform panel, and type +15 in the X cell, thus moving the node 15 px to the right. As you can see, Affinity Designer will do all
the calculations for you, adding, subtracting, dividing or multiplying all the appropriate values.

make a Rectangle and use Transform panel

Step 4

Do the same
with the lower left node, typing -15
in the X cell and thus moving the
node 15 px to the left. You can
adjust the stroke weight of your shape in the context toolbar above, making it
thicker. 

Use the Rectangle Tool (M)
to add the bottom part of our lighthouse. Then select both created shapes and Align their centers with the help of
the Align Horizontal function in the
upper context toolbar.

Use the Rectangle Tool to add the bottom and Align both parts

Step 5

Select the
bottom rectangle, hold down Alt and Shift, and drag the shape up, thus
creating a copy. Repeat this action several times, forming the stripes across
the body of the lighthouse.

add stripes

Step 6

Select
the three stripes that we’ve created and head to Operations in your upper Toolbar.
Press the Add button to unite our stripes
into a single compound shape. You can check how it looks in the Layers Panel.

Now we need
to get rid of the parts outside the body shape. Make a copy of the body shape of our lighthouse
(Command-C > Command-V),
select the newly-created body copy together with the compound stripes shape, and use the Intersect
Operation
to cut off the unwanted parts.

unite the stripes with Add Operation and Intersect them

Step 7

Let’s move
on and create the door and windows of our lighthouse. Place a small rectangle
in the bottom part for the door, and make its corners 45% Rounded in the upper context toolbar. Extend the shape,
dragging its lower part under the bottom part of the lighthouse. 

Select both
the bottom part of the lighthouse and the rounded rectangle, hold down the Option (Alt) key, and use the Subtract Operation to hide the unneeded
piece of the door shape. Holding down the Option
key helps us to perform the Operations
in a non-destructive way, so that you can still edit the initial objects in
your Layers Panel.

create the rounded rectangle for the door

Step 8

Finish up
with the base of our lighthouse by adding all the rest of the windows and forming the
top with the help of the Rectangle Tool
(M)
and Triangle.

finish up the base of the lighthouse

2. Color
the Lighthouse and Form the Background of the Icon

Step 1

We’ll be
picking the colors directly from our sketch and applying them to the base we’ve created. Using the Color Picker in
Affinity Designer may seem tricky at first, but when you get used to it,
it turns out to be very convenient. 

Find the eyedropper icon at the top of your
Colour panel. Click it, holding down your left mouse button, and drag onto
your workspace. You will see a magnifying circle, showing the color beneath it.
Once you hover over the desired color, release the mouse button and notice the
selected color is saved in a tiny circle next to the eyedropper icon. 

Now you
can select the desired object (the bottom part of the lighthouse, for example)
and click the eyedropper icon in the Colour
panel to apply the saved color. Then you can select all other objects that
require the same color and apply it again by clicking the eyedropper icon.

use the eyedropper from the Colour panel to apply colors

Apply the
colors to all parts of our lighthouse and Group
(Command-G)
the parts.

Apply the colors to all parts of our lighthouse

Step 2

Let’s add a
gentle shadow to the right part of our lighthouse to make it more intricate and three-dimensional. Create a grey rectangle the same height as our lighthouse, and place it
so that it covers the right half of the object. Set its Opacity to 50% and its Blend Mode to Multiply in the Layers panel. 

Copy the
lighthouse group, Ungroup All its
parts and merge them into a single shape with the help of the Add Operation, thus creating a
lighthouse silhouette.

Now for the
tricky part: we need to hide the unneeded part of the shadow outside the
lighthouse by creating a Mask Layer. Affinity Designer offers a very simple way to do this through the Layers panel. You need to grab the lighthouse silhouette shape in the
Layers panel and drag it over the thumbnail preview of the shadow shape.
You will see a tiny blue rectangle next to the thumbnail preview of the shadow shape in the Layers panel indicating that you are
about to create a Mask Layer.
Release the mouse button and check your result.

add a shadow with Mask Layer

Step 3

Add a red
circular frame with the Ellipse Tool (M),
following the outlines of our sketch and using Operations to create a hollow ring. 

Now we need to form the ocean waves. To make it
easier to work with, let’s turn on the grid by selecting Show Grid in the View
menu, and enable Snap to grid in the
snapping options in your Toolbox, under the magnet icon. Take
the Pen Tool (P) and create a zigzagged line. Select all its nodes with the
Node Tool (A).

enable snapping and create a zigzag

Step 4

Convert the
nodes to Smooth with the help of the
Convert option in the context
toolbar above. You can use the Pen Tool
(P)
 again and click the side node of the wave to form a closed path along the inner part of the icon frame. 

Fill it with dark-turquoise color from your sketch and add another wave of a slightly lighter color.

convert the nodes to smooth and color the waves

Another way to create waves of the proper size inside the frame is to create larger shapes and then use the Mask Layer to hide the unwanted parts, as we did previously. Group (Command-G) the waves, place a
white circle on top of the shapes, and drag the ellipse above the waves group thumbnail in the Layers panel.

Use the Mask Layer to hide the waves

Step 5

Add the
dark-blue night sky and a small piece of ground, placing them in the same Mask Layer group as the waves.

add the sky and the ground

Step 6

Form the
clouds by placing three even circles, and merge them with Add Operation. Use the Vector
Crop Tool
to cut off the lower part of the cloud.

form the clouds with Vector Crop Tool

Step 7

Follow the
initial sketch and add the stars and the light coming from the top part of the
lighthouse.

add more details from the sketch

Step 8

We can add
depth to our image by using subtle gradients. For example, let’s select the
sky shape, take the Gradient Tool (G)
and drag it from top to bottom, creating a vertical linear gradient. Move to
the Gradient options in the Fill drop-down menu in the upper context toolbar.

Here you can adjust the
colors of the gradient parts by double-clicking on the Colour preview box, and add a nice textured effect by moving the Noise slider. Apply some more gentle
linear gradients to other parts of our image, such as the beams of light and the
sea waves.

use linear gradients to add deepness

Step 9

Use gradients to adjust the color of the frame, making it brighter and cleaner. You can
apply the same Noise effect from the
Colour panel by clicking a small
circle icon under the Colour Wheel
and choosing the desired Noise value from the box in the bottom right corner.

Apply noise effect from the Colour panel

Congratulations!
Our Lighthouse Icon Is Finished!

We’ve switched
the frame color to white and added some more finishing details to give our icon
a completed look: another semi-transparent shadow on the right, a shadow under
the frame, and a dark-grey background with subtle noise effect. 

This is it! Our
lighthouse icon is complete. I hope you’ve enjoyed this short tutorial and
found some useful tips and tricks on working in Affinity Designer. Stay tuned
for more!

Final result Flat lighthouse icon

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