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Desktop calendar interface showing a week view with day names, large date numbers, colored event indicators, and left-sidebar navigation in a high-contrast monochromatic palette.
Summary
A desktop calendar widget showing a week view (Friday through Wednesday) with day names on the left, oversized right-aligned date numbers, colored dot indicators for events or categories, and a narrow left sidebar for navigation.
Visual description
The interface is presented in a window frame on a muted purple-gray desktop background. The left sidebar holds three hamburger-menu and utility icons stacked vertically. The main content area displays a vertical list of seven consecutive days (Friday through Wednesday): each row pairs a left-aligned day name in sans-serif with a large, bold white number (22, 23, 24, etc.) on the far right. A thin black line separates most rows; one row (Sunday) is filled with solid black as a highlight or selected state. Colored circular dots (red, orange, blue) appear next to certain dates as event tags. The overall palette is monochromatic (whites, light grays, dark grays, black) with minimal color used functionally for indicators. Typography is clean and hierarchical, favoring readability and scan speed.
Key takeaway
The oversized date number on the right rail creates an immediate visual anchor and makes date selection obvious at a glance. Using thin separators and monochromatic color with functional color dots (not decorative) keeps the interface readable without clutter. The narrow left sidebar preserves the main content area while offering navigation, a common app pattern for task/calendar management.
Reuse notes
Ideal for scheduling, productivity, or calendar applications, especially desktop or web platforms where horizontal space is plentiful. The monochromatic palette suits professional or technical audiences. Works well as part of a larger app interface where the calendar is one view among others. The pattern of colored indicators scales well when events or categories are numerous but still needs visual hierarchy to avoid noise.









