AtelierStatus bar options
Design exploration · Lifecycle status

Five ways to draw the status bar

Each option is rendered twice — once with the project lifecycle (8 stages) and once with the item lifecycle (9 stages) — to prove the pattern scales across both levels. In every demo the timeline sits at In production: everything before is done, everything after is upcoming.

Done Current — In production Upcoming
Option 1

Node Rail

Connected nodes on a horizontal line — the refined baseline of the current spine. Done nodes fill orange, the current node enlarges with a ring, upcoming nodes stay hollow. Calm, editorial, reads at a glance.

Project status · 8 stages Milestone 4 of 6
Uploaded
In review
Quote
Contract
In productionMilestone 4 of 6
QC
Shipping
Delivered
Item status · 9 stages Shop drawing approved · in fabrication
Draft
In review
Shop submitted
Shop approved
In productionIn fabrication
QC
Crating
Shipped
Delivered

Pros

Familiar, quiet, scales from 8 to 9+ stages without redesign; label under every node keeps the whole journey legible.

Cons

Needs full width to breathe; labels get tight on mobile and long stage names wrap.

Best for

The dashboard hero and project overview pages — the default, safest choice.

Option 2

Segmented Bar

One continuous bar split into equal segments — one per stage. Completed segments fill solid, the current segment half-fills with a slow pulse, upcoming stay light grey. Shown expanded (with labels) and inline (compact reading for lists).

Project status · 8 stages Milestone 4 of 6
UploadedIn reviewQuoteContract In productionQCShippingDelivered
Inline reading — table cells & cards
In production · Stage 5 of 8
Item status · 9 stages Shop drawing approved · in fabrication
DraftIn reviewShop submittedShop approved In productionQCCratingShippedDelivered
Inline reading — item rows
In production · Stage 5 of 9

Pros

Extremely compact; the same component reads at 170px wide or full-bleed. Segment count = stage count, so progress is honest.

Cons

Individual stage names disappear at small sizes; relies on the text caption to name the current stage.

Best for

Item rows, tables, and cards where vertical space is precious.

Option 3

Chevron Pipeline

Arrow steps pointing right — a breadcrumb of progress. Done stages fill dark ink with a small check, the current stage flares accent orange, upcoming stay muted. Reads like a production pipeline on a shop floor.

Project status · 8 stages Milestone 4 of 6
Uploaded
In review
Quote
Contract
In production
QC
Shipping
Delivered
In production · Milestone 4 of 6 · casting & finishing
Item status · 9 stages Shop drawing approved · in fabrication
Draft
In review
Shop submitted
Shop approved
In production
QC
Crating
Shipped
Delivered
In production · Shop drawing approved · in fabrication

Pros

Strong directional momentum; every stage is named at all times; done/current/upcoming contrast is unmistakable.

Cons

Visually loud next to quiet content; 9 chevrons get cramped below ~900px and need horizontal scroll.

Best for

Internal / PM production views where the pipeline metaphor earns its weight.

Option 4

Numbered Stepper

Numbered circles joined by a line — done steps flip to an orange check, the current number is ringed in accent, upcoming stay grey. Shown horizontal for wide screens and vertical for narrow panels and mobile.

Project status · 8 stages Milestone 4 of 6
Uploaded
In review
Quote
Contract
5In production
6QC
7Shipping
8Delivered
Stage 5 of 8 · Milestone 4 of 6
Vertical variant · side panel
Contract
Signed Mar 12
5
In production
Milestone 4 of 6
6
QC
Est. Aug 22
7
Shipping
Est. Sep 04
8
Delivered
Est. Sep 18
Item status · 9 stages Shop drawing approved · in fabrication
Draft
In review
Shop submitted
Shop approved
5In production
6QC
7Crating
8Shipped
9Delivered
Stage 5 of 9 · Shop drawing approved · in fabrication
Vertical variant · item side panel
Shop approved
Approved Jun 30
5
In production
In fabrication
6
QC
Est. Aug 10
7
Crating
Est. Aug 18
8
Shipped
Est. Aug 25
9
Delivered
Est. Sep 08

Pros

Numbers give instant "5 of 9" orientation; the vertical variant carries dates and detail, perfect for drill-in panels.

Cons

Heavier than the rail; two variants to maintain; check-vs-number mix needs consistent rules.

Best for

Item detail pages and mobile — the vertical form is the strongest narrow-screen answer here.

Option 5

Compact Progress + Callout

A slim rectangular track with a position marker and a text callout — "Stage 5 of 8 · In production". Click Details to expand the full stage list. The space-saving option for dense views; also shown embedded in an item row.

Project status · 8 stages Milestone 4 of 6
Stage 5 of 8 · In production
Uploaded
In review
Quote
Contract
In productionMilestone 4 of 6
QC
Shipping
Delivered
Item status · 9 stages Shop drawing approved · in fabrication
Stage 5 of 9 · In production
Draft
In review
Shop submitted
Shop approved
In productionIn fabrication
QC
Crating
Shipped
Delivered
IMG
Onda Sofa — BoucleITEM 014 · LIVV Wellness
5/9 · In production
Draft
In review
Shop submitted
Shop approved
In productionIn fabrication
QC
Crating
Shipped
Delivered

Pros

Smallest footprint of all five; progressive disclosure keeps dense tables clean while the full journey stays one click away.

Cons

Stage names hidden by default; the marker alone can't communicate which stage without the caption.

Best for

Dense item lists, order tables, and dashboard summaries with many rows.