The breeze icons are calmer, and they are clearer in a few cases: for
example, New (where elementary squanders đź—‹ recognisability in
redundantly conveying what kind of file will be created), Cut (where
elementary’s puffy scissors look to me like a rabbit using binoculars),
and, though it pains me to say it, Save (where a floppy disk might be a
relic, but elementary’s arrow-on-a-rectangle is just mysterious). And
breeze uses a “+” emblem more consistently, for the various Insert
commands, than elementary does.

In other cases, the elementary icons are much clearer: for example, Save
as PDF (I have no idea what breeze is trying to do there), Paste (where
breeze’s icon would work equally well for Copy!), Rows, and Columns. (I
don’t understand why breeze uses any diagonal lines in the last two.)

Overall, though, I agree with Will. Unfortunately, the massive number of
buttons LibreOffice displays at once — and the resulting tinyness of
each icon — makes it impractical for them to use colour as little as the
Breeze theme does. (This is the crucial difference with Frederik’s
comparison of a Nautilus sidebar that has only 13 items in it.) The
LibreOffice buttons are so numerous, and so tiny, that hardly anyone
will think, for example, “I want to insert a picture — oh, look, the
seventeenth button along looks a bit like a landscape picture, maybe
that’s what I want”. Instead, if they use the toolbar button at all,
they’ll use it after having read its tooltip, or after instruction from
someone else. And whether or not they find it themselves, it’s much
easier to be told, to remember, and to find it quickly later if, “Insert
Picture is the blue and orange wavy block” rather than having to rely
solely on shape, “Insert Picture is the one with a zig-zaggy triangle
and a little circle above it”.

> Personally I prefer Colibre as I find it to be the most professional

Well, professional is not a word I’d choose — I don’t see any
consistency in its use of outlined vs. non-outlined shapes, sometimes
even in the same icon. But Colibre does use colour about as much as I
think a theme for this many buttons needs to.

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to libreoffice in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1827948

Title:
  Use libreoffice-style-breeze as the default icon theme

Status in libreoffice package in Ubuntu:
  New

Bug description:
  The Yaru icon theme uses 1 pixel strokes for its symbolic icon set. 
  So do the breeze icons for libreoffice.

  All in all does the breeze icon set for libre office fit very good to
  the look of the Yaru icons.

  https://i.imgur.com/tgioycv.png

  https://i.imgur.com/WwKvjMh.png

  Thus I would suggest to use it as the default icon set in Ubuntu to
  guarantee a consistent look and feel across the desktop

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