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Illustration·

Food Icons

From satay to seafood — this Indonesian food icon set brings the richness of the archipelago's culinary identity into a clean, scalable UI system built for Tokopedia's marketplace.

Icon Design — Indonesian Food Icons

UI Icon Set · Food Category Icons · Tokopedia · E-Commerce

A thoughtfully crafted food icon set designed for Tokopedia's Indonesian food marketplace — built to represent the diverse culinary categories of Indonesian cuisine in a consistent, scalable, and visually cohesive system.

The icon set is organized around a three-color variant system: active green, accent orange, and neutral grey — a deliberate design decision that gives the system maximum UI flexibility. The green variant signals selection or primary state; the orange variant communicates action, promotion, or secondary highlight; the grey variant serves inactive or disabled states. All three maintain identical form and weight, ensuring seamless state transitions in any UI context.

The icons visible in this panel represent three essential Indonesian food categories: a crossed fork-and-spoon for the general dining category — the universal restaurant marker given a local, approachable stroke weight; a prawn/shrimp icon for seafood — rendered with enough anatomical accuracy to be instantly recognizable yet simple enough to read at 24px; a grilled meat or fish steak for the protein category, with characteristic grill lines that communicate texture and cooking method in four strokes; and a satay skewer cluster — two bamboo skewers with three rounds each — the most distinctly Indonesian icon in the set, immediately grounding the icon system in local culinary culture.

Each icon shares a consistent stroke weight, rounded terminals, and a 2:3 aspect ratio that scales from mobile nav bars to desktop category headers without loss of clarity. The outlined style with selective fill creates visual warmth while maintaining the technical precision a product icon system demands.

An icon set that speaks the visual language of Indonesian food culture — precise, familiar, and built to perform at every size.

Completed

March 2021

Tags

IllustrationvectorProject

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