How to Choose the Best Google Docs Pack Icons for Your Workflow
1) Define how you’ll use icons
- Primary use: UI (menus, toolbars), document headings, templates, presentations, or collaboration labels.
- Scale needs: small inline icons (16–24px) vs. large headers/illustrations (48px+).
- Editing needs: whether you’ll recolor/resize icons frequently.
2) Prefer SVG (or vector) first
- Why: infinite scalability, editable stroke/fill, smaller when optimized, better for accessibility and high-DPI screens.
- Fallback: use PNG for static slide decks or apps that don’t support SVG.
3) Choose a style that matches your docs and brand
- Neutral / Minimal: best for professional documents and broad reuse.
- Rounded / Playful: good for internal docs, classrooms, marketing.
- Filled vs outline: filled reads better at small sizes; outline can look cleaner at medium sizes.
- Pick one style and keep it consistent across your pack.
4) Check technical quality & completeness
- Consistent grid and stroke weight across icons (e.g., 24px grid, 2px stroke).
- Sufficient coverage: aim for an icon pack that covers core actions and content types you use (at least ~200 icons for broad workflows).
- Multiple weights/sizes or variants (filled/outline) if you switch themes (light/dark).
5) Confirm file formats & delivery
- Must-haves: SVG source, PNG exports (1x, 2x), and an icon font or sprite if you integrate into web tooling.
- Extras: Figma/Sketch/AI files for bulk edits and component libraries.
6) Licensing and attribution
- Commercial use allowed? Ensure license permits your use (commercial, internal).
- Attribution requirements: avoid packs that force visible attribution in documents unless acceptable.
7) Accessibility & clarity
- Simplicity: icons must be recognizable at target sizes within 0.25–0.5s.
- Contrast: test icons against your document backgrounds and dark mode.
- Labeling: always pair critical icons with text labels (tooltips or captions) for clarity.
8) Integration with Google Docs workflow
- Quick insertion: prefer packs available as PNG/SVG you can drag into Docs or a Google Drive folder for reuse.
- Templates / add-ons: check whether the pack provides templates or a Docs/Slides-friendly bundle.
- Cloud-ready: store the source SVGs in Drive so teammates can copy and edit.
9) Practical selection checklist (quick)
- SVG included — Yes/No
- PNG exports (1x, 2x) — Yes/No
- Consistent grid & stroke — Yes/No
- Style matches brand — Yes/No
- License permits intended use — Yes/No
- Covers core icons you need (~200+) — Yes/No
10) Recommended approach for picking a pack (step-by-step)
- Assume you need a neutral SVG set sized for 24px with filled + outline variants.
- Filter packs for SVG + Figma files and a permissive license.
- Download a 20–30 icon sample and test in a real Doc (small inline, heading, slide).
- Confirm legibility at target sizes and in dark/light backgrounds.
- Buy or adopt the full pack and add sources to Drive for team access.
If you want, I can:
- recommend 3 current icon packs (free + paid) that match a 24px neutral style and provide SVGs, or
- test a specific icon pack you’ve found and give a quick pass/fail on the checklist.
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