An Adwaita styled companion icon theme with extra icons for popular apps to fit with Gnome Shell's original icons.
The purpose of this theme is to provide third-party apps with a consistent look and feel in Gnome Shell.
NB: This theme requires Adwaita in order to work.
This theme is built mostly upon the work of Gnome's Adwaita designers and Gnome Circle apps' developers, as well as Papirus theme designers, with a touch of tinkering from myself, @dusansimic, @julianfairfax and others here and there. The theme provides icons for the most popular apps people really do install and use, and also covers the most frequently installed dependency GUI apps that almost nobody uses (like Avahi browsers, QT Designer, Software token, etc.).
The goal of MoreWaita is to add to Adwaita, not modify it, and to do roughly what Breeze does for KDE. This theme does not override any Adwaita icons, nor any Gnome Circle apps icons, nor icons that generally fit into the Adwaita paradigm (like Transmission GTK). Currently, this theme is way less all-inclusive than many others, but the aim is to be on par with Papirus some day. However, this is (mostly) a one-man hobby effort, albeit with some greatly appreciated help, so suggestions, requests, PRs and contributions are very welcome. In the meantime, I'll focus on adding icons that the community is requesting.
For most icons, especially branded ones, the general idea is to stay as close as possible to the original icons – to the point of using them in full – and giving them the distinct Adwaita 'perspective' and general flatness. One thing this theme deviates from is the Gnome colour palette in brand icons – MoreWaita keeps the brand colours.
This theme is built and tested against vanilla Gnome on Arch Linux. If an icon is in the theme, but is not applying to your app, please open an issue and mention the icon name referenced in your app's .desktop
file.
git clone https://github.com/somepaulo/MoreWaita.git
cd MoreWaita
sudo ./install.sh
This copies the whole theme folder without the build files into /usr/share/icons/
. You will be prompted for your password.
./install.sh
This copies the whole theme folder without the build files into ~/.local/share/icons/
.
Use the same steps as for installation.
Simply chose another theme and then delete the entire MoreWaita
folder from either /usr/share/icons/
or ~/.local/share/icons/
depending on your installation choice above.
- Enable COPR repository
dnf copr enable dusansimic/themes
- Install the package
dnf install morewaita-icon-theme
Either use the Tweaks
app to choose and activate the icon theme or run the following command:
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface icon-theme 'MoreWaita'
- Open Files (Nautilus).
- Find the folder you wish to change the icon for.
- Right click on the folder.
- Click on
Properties
. - Click on the folder image.
- Navigate to the MoreWaita installation folder and into the
places
subfolder (typically/usr/share/icons/MoreWaita/places/scalable/
). - Select the icon you wish to use.
- Click
Open
. - Follow the same procedure to revert the icon. Just click
Revert
instead of selecting a new icon in step 7.
If the theme doesn't apply try the following command:
sudo gtk-update-icon-cache -f -t /usr/share/icons/MoreWaita && xdg-desktop-menu forceupdate
gtk-update-icon-cache -f -t ~/.local/share/icons/MoreWaita && xdg-desktop-menu forceupdate
If the theme applies, but a particular app doesn't get themed (and its icon is in MoreWaita), check its respective .desktop
file. Some apps have icon paths hardcoded into their .desktop
file or have a different icon name set there or no icon set at all. This can differ between distros. If you happen to have such apps, you'll need to copy their .desktop
files into ~/.local/share/applications
and modify them there providing the correct icon name. Alternatively, use a menu editor like MenuLibre
or Alacarte
.
If your app's .desktop
file references an icon name not present in MoreWaita's apps/scalable
folder, please report it in an issue providing the icon name from your system.
These screenshots show icons currently in git, versioned releases may be behind