default 2026
Storytelling
Sevan Mammoli
Sevan Mammoli
Interaction Designer & Product Designer

Next Weather - One Forecast, Many Adventures

Most weather apps feel like a single, frozen poster: the same layout, the same numbers, the same tone, no matter who you are or what you’re about to do. NextWeather was designed like a story that unfolds differently for each person. From the first screen, it stops broadcasting and starts adapting: you build your own space, choose the widgets that matter, and decide what should come first. Customization here is not cosmetic. It is narrative. You can swap widgets depending on what you’re planning, wind and swell when the day is about surf, humidity and rain windows when the day is about agriculture, air quality and temperature swings when the day is about training outside. You can change the hierarchy so the most critical signal sits at the top, while secondary details move down or disappear entirely. You can resize and rearrange blocks so the screen reads fast when you are rushing, and deeper when you have time to plan. And for the same place, you can keep more than one layout, because the same beach or field can mean different things on different days. Each location becomes a scene, each activity a chapter, and the interface becomes the narrator that changes perspective with you. Personal thresholds turn raw forecasts into meaning, so the data stops feeling generic and starts feeling personal. The visual language then delivers the story’s rhythm in a single beat: go, maybe, or no-go. The weather stays the same. The story changes, because it is finally told in your voice.
https://www.behance.net/gallery/218625903/Weather-app-UX-UI-design-Mobile-app-design