top-design

Create award-winning, immersive web experiences at the level of Awwwards-featured agencies. Use when the user mentions "premium website", "portfolio site", "scroll animations", "Awwwards quality", or "brand experience". Covers dramatic typography, purposeful motion, scroll-based composition, and performance-optimized animation. For foundational UI, see refactoring-ui. For type selection, see web-typography.

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Install skill "top-design" with this command: npx skills add wondelai/skills/wondelai-skills-top-design

Top-Design: Award-Winning Digital Experiences

Create websites and applications at the level of world-class digital agencies. This skill embodies the craft of studios that consistently win FWA, Awwwards, CSS Design Awards, and Webby Awards.

Core Principle

Every pixel is intentional -- nothing default, nothing accidental. The agencies you are emulating -- Locomotive, Studio Freight, AREA 17, Active Theory, Hello Monday -- share a common DNA: typography IS the design (not decoration, but architecture), motion creates emotion (animation serves narrative, not novelty), white space is a weapon (tension through restraint), and performance is non-negotiable (60fps or nothing).

The foundation: What separates 10/10 from 8/10 is not incremental improvement but a qualitative leap. An 8/10 design has good typography, nice colors, and smooth animations. A 10/10 design has typography that makes you gasp, colors that feel invented for this specific project, and animations that tell stories. The gap is not skill -- it is intention. Every decision at the 10/10 level answers the question: "Does this serve the experience, or is it just filling space?"

Scoring

Goal: 10/10. When reviewing or creating digital experiences, rate them 0-10 using the rubric below. A 10/10 means the design would be featured on Awwwards. Always provide the current score and specific improvements needed to reach 10/10.

Scoring Rubric

ScoreLevelDescription
0-2AmateurDefault fonts, no hierarchy, generic layout, template feel
3-4BasicDecent typography, some hierarchy, but forgettable
5-6CompetentGood fundamentals, clean execution, but lacks soul
7-8ProfessionalStrong typography, intentional motion, clear POV
9ExceptionalSignature moments, memorable details, near-flawless craft
10World-classWould win Awwwards SOTD, defines new standards

Category Scoring (Each 0-10)

TYPOGRAPHY (Weight: 25%)

ScoreCriteria
0-3System fonts, uniform scale, default tracking
4-6Premium fonts, some scale contrast, basic hierarchy
7-8Dramatic scale contrast (10:1+), perfect tracking, optical alignment
9-10Typography IS the design -- gasping moments, custom/variable fonts, type as architecture

VISUAL COMPOSITION (Weight: 25%)

ScoreCriteria
0-3Centered everything, equal spacing, rigid grid, no tension
4-6Some asymmetry, decent spacing rhythm, basic depth
7-8Intentional grid breaks, layered elements, strong negative space
9-10Magnetic compositions, unexpected scale shifts, elements that breathe and surprise

MOTION & INTERACTION (Weight: 20%)

ScoreCriteria
0-3No animation or default/linear motion
4-6Basic transitions, some scroll effects
7-8Custom easing, orchestrated reveals, purposeful parallax
9-10Motion that tells stories, perfectly timed choreography, scroll feels invented

COLOR & ATMOSPHERE (Weight: 15%)

ScoreCriteria
0-3Random colors, pure black/white, no mood
4-6Cohesive palette, some atmosphere
7-8Colors feel owned, contextual shifts, intentional contrast
9-10Colors feel invented for this project, atmosphere you can feel

DETAILS & CRAFT (Weight: 15%)

ScoreCriteria
0-3Default cursors, no hover states, generic everything
4-6Basic hover states, some custom elements
7-8Custom cursor, magnetic buttons, branded selection colors
9-10Every micro-detail considered -- focus states, loading, empty states, scroll indicators

Quick Score Formula

Total = (Typography x 0.25) + (Composition x 0.25) + (Motion x 0.20) + (Color x 0.15) + (Details x 0.15)

The Seven Pillars of 10/10 Design

1. Typography as Architecture

Core concept: Typography is not decoration layered onto a design -- it IS the design. The typeface you choose, the scale you set, and the tracking you refine dictate everything else: color palette mood, animation style, spacing rhythm, and overall personality. When someone scrolls past your hero and does not pause, your typography is not working.

Why it works: Dramatic scale contrast creates immediate visual hierarchy that communicates even when content is blurred or viewed from across the room. Large display type with tight tracking commands attention like architecture commands a skyline, while intimate body text draws readers into the content. This tension between monumental and personal is what makes people stop scrolling.

Key insights:

  • Massive scale contrast is non-negotiable -- the ratio between display and body should be at minimum 10:1 (e.g., 180px headline / 14px body), with viewport-filling type at the extreme end making body text feel intimate
  • Negative tracking on large type (-0.02em to -0.05em) tightens display text into cohesive visual units, while generous line-height for body (1.5-1.7) ensures readability
  • Font selection defines tier -- display fonts should come from premium foundries (Pangram Pangram, Dinamo, Grilli Type, Klim, Commercial Type) or quality Google alternatives (Space Grotesk, Instrument Serif, Fraunces); never Inter, Roboto, Arial, or system-ui for hero experiences
  • Variable fonts enable weight animation on hover states and transitions, adding dynamism without layout shift
  • Optical alignment over mathematical alignment -- human perception is imperfect, so text must be adjusted visually, not just numerically
  • Control every line break on headlines -- text that breaks beautifully requires manual intervention at key breakpoints

Product applications:

ContextApplicationExample
Portfolio heroViewport-filling display type with dramatic scale drop to bodyLocomotive.ca hero typography
Brand websiteCustom/variable font with weight animation on hoverStudio Freight interactive type
Product landingTight display tracking with generous body spacingApple product pages
Editorial layoutSerif/sans pairing with extreme scale contrastAREA 17 case studies
Cultural institutionStatement typography that becomes the visual identityHello Monday museum sites
Tech startupPremium geometric sans at architectural scaleStripe typography system

Copy patterns:

  • Display: single powerful statement, 3-7 words maximum
  • Subhead: one sentence that contextualizes the display type
  • Body: 16-18px minimum, generous line-height, moderate measure (45-75 characters)
  • The "typography stare test": blur your eyes -- does the type hierarchy still read? If everything looks the same importance when blurred, you have failed

Ethical boundary: Typography choices should enhance readability and accessibility, not sacrifice legibility for aesthetic novelty. Ensure body text meets WCAG contrast requirements and remains readable at standard viewing distances.

See: references/typography.md for font pairing strategies, type scale systems, and advanced CSS typography.

2. Layout & Composition

Core concept: Master the grid so you can break it with intention. Every violation should feel deliberate, not accidental. The rhythm of density and breathing room -- full-viewport hero, intimate text section, massive single word, dense grid -- creates a reading experience that holds attention.

Why it works: White space is not empty space -- it is active design material that creates tension, controls pacing, and makes viewers lean in. Asymmetric layouts generate visual energy that centered, symmetrical compositions cannot achieve. When elements overlap, bleed, or extend beyond their containers with intention, the design feels alive and confident rather than constrained.

Key insights:

  • White space as a weapon -- amateurs fill every gap with content, professionals use padding liberally, 10/10 designers use white space to create tension that controls the reader's eye
  • Asymmetric balance creates interest -- offset elements from center (e.g., one column offset in a 12-column grid), let images bleed and extend beyond containers
  • Unexpected scale shifts create rhythm -- the alternation between massive and intimate, dense and sparse, creates a narrative pacing that prevents monotony
  • Elements should overlap, bleed, or extend with intention -- breaking the container signals confidence and craftsmanship
  • The grid paradox -- a strong underlying grid is necessary precisely so you can break it meaningfully; without the grid, breaks are just chaos
  • The screenshot test -- if someone would not screenshot a section and share it, you are missing signature moments

Product applications:

ContextApplicationExample
Hero sectionOffset title with bleeding imagerymargin-left: 8.33%; margin-right: -5vw
Portfolio gridVaried card sizes with intentional asymmetryLocomotive project showcases
Section transitionsScale shifts between dense and breathing sectionsStudio Freight scroll compositions
Image galleriesMixed full-bleed and contained imagesAREA 17 editorial layouts
Feature showcaseOverlapping elements creating depthActive Theory layered compositions
NavigationAsymmetric mega-menus with dramatic scaleHello Monday navigation systems

Copy patterns:

  • Hero: position text off-center with intentional alignment to grid
  • Sections: alternate between full-width immersion and contained reading
  • Cards: vary sizes within grids -- not everything needs to be the same dimensions
  • Images: mix full-bleed, contained, and overlapping treatments

Ethical boundary: Layout experimentation must not compromise navigation clarity or content accessibility. Users should always understand where they are, how to move forward, and how to access critical information regardless of compositional choices.

See: references/layout-systems.md for grid frameworks, breakpoints, and responsive patterns.

3. Motion & Animation

Core concept: Every animation must answer "Why does this move?" Motion is not polish applied at the end -- it is core to the design, prototyped early and developed alongside visual design. The three laws of elite motion are: purpose over decoration, custom curves (never linear), and orchestration over isolation.

Why it works: Choreographed motion creates a cinematic experience that guides attention, communicates hierarchy, and creates emotional resonance. When elements animate in relationship to each other rather than independently, the result feels cohesive and intentional. Custom easing curves (exponential, quartic) give movement a physical quality that default browser easing cannot achieve.

Key insights:

  • Custom easing is mandatory -- ease, ease-in, ease-out, and linear are banned; use cubic-bezier(0.16, 1, 0.3, 1) (expo out), cubic-bezier(0.25, 1, 0.5, 1) (quart out), cubic-bezier(0.87, 0, 0.13, 1) (expo in-out)
  • Page load choreography follows a strict timeline -- background/structure (0-200ms), hero title words staggered (200-600ms, 80ms stagger), subtitle (400-800ms), navigation cascade (600-900ms), supporting elements (800-1200ms)
  • Scroll-triggered sequences reveal elements as they enter viewport -- not all at once; parallax used sparingly and only on non-essential elements
  • Pinned sections for storytelling moments and horizontal scroll for galleries (with clear affordance) create immersive reading experiences
  • Default browser scroll is unacceptable -- use Lenis or Locomotive Scroll for smooth, custom scroll behavior
  • 60fps is non-negotiable -- if an animation drops frames, simplify or remove it

Product applications:

ContextApplicationExample
Page loadChoreographed staggered reveal sequenceStudio Freight entry animations
Scroll sectionsPinned storytelling with progressive revealsLocomotive scroll experiences
NavigationMagnetic hover effects with custom cursorsActive Theory interactive nav
Image revealsClip-path or mask animations on scroll enterAREA 17 case study reveals
Page transitionsSeamless cross-page animation continuityHello Monday page morphs
Micro-interactionsHover weight shifts, button magnetic effectsDogstudio interactive details

Copy patterns:

  • Reveal: text lines slide up individually with stagger (not fade in as a block)
  • Hover: elements respond with custom cursor, scale shift, or color transition
  • Scroll: content reveals progressively, never all at once
  • Transition: pages morph rather than cut or fade

Ethical boundary: Motion must never block interaction, cause motion sickness, or prevent users from accessing content. Always respect prefers-reduced-motion and ensure all content is accessible without animation. Animations longer than 1.2s require clear justification.

See: references/animation-patterns.md for scroll animations, page transitions, and micro-interactions with code.

4. Color & Contrast

Core concept: Color should feel invented for each specific project -- not pulled from a generic palette generator. The three approaches are monochromatic tension (95% one dominant color, 5% accent that pops), bold signature (own a color combination and make it unmistakable), and contextual shifting (color responds to content, with sections having distinct palettes).

Why it works: Color creates atmosphere before a single word is read. When colors feel owned by a specific project, they become part of the brand's identity. Pure black (#000000) and pure white (#ffffff) feel digital and lifeless; slightly warm variants (#0a0a0a, #fafaf9) feel physical and considered. The restrained use of a single accent color creates moments of surprise that draw the eye exactly where intended.

Key insights:

  • Never use pure black or pure white -- warm variants create a physical quality that pure digital colors lack
  • The functional color hierarchy -- text-primary, text-secondary (60% opacity), text-tertiary (40% opacity), surface, border (10% opacity) -- creates consistent depth across all components
  • Accent color creates moments of surprise -- a single strong accent (#ff4d00 or similar) used sparingly has more impact than a complex multi-color palette
  • Contextual color shifts between sections signal content changes and create visual chapters
  • The squint test -- squint at your design; if the important elements do not stand out through contrast alone, your color hierarchy is failing
  • Colors must work in both light and dark contexts -- design the system, not individual instances

Product applications:

ContextApplicationExample
Agency portfolioMonochromatic with signature accentLocomotive: cream + black + orange spark
Brand identityBold owned color combinationStudio Freight: black + cream + rust
Client showcaseContextual shifting per case studyAREA 17: adapts palette to each client
Product landingDark mode with single vibrant accentStripe: dark navy + signature purple
Cultural siteRich tonal palette from source materialHello Monday: palette drawn from art/content
Tech productMinimal neutral with functional accentLinear: grayscale + signature blue

Copy patterns:

  • Define CSS custom properties for your full color system: --color-dark, --color-light, --color-accent
  • Build functional tokens on top: --color-text-primary, --color-text-secondary, --color-surface
  • Use opacity-based variants (rgba(10, 10, 10, 0.6)) for consistent secondary/tertiary text
  • Accent color appears on CTAs, links, and single-detail moments -- never everywhere

Ethical boundary: Color choices must meet WCAG 2.1 AA contrast requirements at minimum. Atmospheric design cannot come at the cost of readability for users with visual impairments. Test all color combinations with contrast checkers.

See: references/case-studies.md for agency technique breakdowns including color system analysis.

5. Scroll-Based Design

Core concept: Scroll is the primary interaction on the web, and it should feel designed, not default. The best digital experiences treat the scroll as a narrative device -- controlling pacing, creating reveals, building tension, and delivering signature moments tied to scroll position.

Why it works: Default browser scroll is mechanical and uniform, treating all content as equally important. Custom scroll behavior (via Lenis or Locomotive Scroll) creates a smooth, weighted feel that mirrors physical objects. When scroll position drives animations, reveals, and transitions, the user's movement through content becomes an active, participatory experience rather than passive consumption.

Key insights:

  • Smooth scroll is the foundation -- implement Lenis or Locomotive Scroll for the weighted, physical scroll feel that every award-winning site uses
  • Parallax must be purposeful -- used sparingly and only on non-essential decorative elements; never on text or critical content
  • Pinned sections create storytelling beats -- locking a section in place while content transforms within it creates cinematic moments
  • Horizontal scroll for galleries requires clear visual affordance so users know to scroll sideways
  • Scroll-triggered reveals should be progressive -- elements enter as they become visible, creating a sense of discovery
  • Scroll velocity can modulate animation speed -- fast scrolling compresses animations, slow scrolling expands them, creating a responsive feel

Product applications:

ContextApplicationExample
Product storyPinned hero with scroll-driven content transformationApple product deep-dives
PortfolioProgressive image reveals tied to scroll positionLocomotive project showcases
EditorialParallax depth on decorative elements onlyAREA 17 editorial layouts
Landing pageHorizontal scroll gallery with clear affordanceStudio Freight work galleries
Brand narrativeScroll-driven animation sequencesActive Theory immersive stories
Feature tourStep-by-step reveals pinned to scroll progressStripe feature presentations

Copy patterns:

  • Use data-scroll, data-scroll-speed, and data-scroll-direction attributes for declarative scroll behavior
  • Implement intersection observers for lightweight scroll-triggered class toggling
  • Reserve GSAP ScrollTrigger for complex, multi-step scroll-driven animations
  • Always provide a non-scroll fallback for accessibility

Ethical boundary: Scroll hijacking that prevents users from scrolling at their own pace is hostile UX. Custom scroll should enhance the experience, not trap users. Always allow users to scroll freely through content, and never make scroll-driven animations mandatory for accessing information.

See: references/animation-patterns.md for scroll animation implementation patterns.

6. Performance & Loading

Core concept: Performance is not an optimization step -- it is a design constraint from day one. A beautiful animation that drops frames, a stunning font that causes layout shift, or a gorgeous image that takes three seconds to load all fail the craft test. 60fps is the floor, not the ceiling.

Why it works: Users perceive performance as quality. A site that loads instantly and scrolls fluidly feels premium, regardless of visual complexity. Conversely, a visually stunning site that stutters or delays feels broken. The best agencies achieve both visual ambition and technical performance by making performance a first-class design decision: choosing GPU-accelerated properties, subsetting fonts, optimizing images, and testing on real devices.

Key insights:

  • Fonts must be subset and preloaded -- only include the glyphs you need, use font-display: swap or optional, and preload critical font files
  • Images must be optimized -- use WebP/AVIF with fallbacks, implement responsive srcset, and lazy-load below-the-fold images
  • Animations must be GPU-accelerated -- only animate transform and opacity; never animate width, height, top, left, or margin
  • No layout shifts -- Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) must be near zero; reserve space for images, fonts, and dynamic content
  • LCP under 2.5s -- Largest Contentful Paint is the key metric; optimize the critical rendering path for the hero
  • First contentful paint must feel instant -- use custom skeleton/loading animations as designed elements, not afterthoughts

Product applications:

ContextApplicationExample
Font loadingSubset, preload, and swap strategy<link rel="preload" as="font" crossorigin>
Image deliveryAVIF/WebP with responsive srcset<picture> element with format fallbacks
Animation perfGPU-only properties with will-change hintstransform: translate3d() + opacity
Layout stabilityAspect-ratio and min-height reservationsaspect-ratio: 16/9 on image containers
Loading experienceDesigned skeleton screens and progress indicatorsCustom branded loading animations
Bundle optimizationCode-split, tree-shake, defer non-critical JSDynamic imports for below-fold interactivity

Copy patterns:

  • Audit with Lighthouse, targeting 90+ on all metrics
  • Test on real devices, not just simulators -- simulators lie about performance and feel
  • Implement loading="lazy" on all images below the fold
  • Use will-change sparingly and only on elements about to animate
  • Profile animations with Chrome DevTools Performance panel at 4x CPU throttle

Ethical boundary: Performance optimization must not strip away accessibility features, skip semantic HTML, or remove meaningful content. Fast-but-inaccessible is not a valid tradeoff.

See: references/technical-stack.md for libraries, tools, and performance optimization techniques.

7. Micro-Interactions

Core concept: The details that signal craft live in the 1% that most designers skip: custom cursors, branded selection colors, magnetic button effects, designed focus states, considered loading states, crafted error pages, and correct micro-typography. These details are the difference between professional and world-class.

Why it works: Micro-interactions create a sense that every pixel was considered. When a cursor changes on hover, when text selection has a branded color, when a button has a subtle magnetic pull, and when focus states are beautiful AND accessible, users feel the care embedded in the experience. These details compound -- individually subtle, collectively transformative.

Key insights:

  • Custom cursor reflects brand personality -- cursor changes on interactive elements, with optional magnetic effect on buttons
  • Selection colors are branded -- custom ::selection color that works well on all backgrounds
  • Every link has a considered hover state -- images have scale or overlay treatment, cards transform meaningfully
  • Focus states are visible AND beautiful -- focus indicators match brand aesthetic while remaining clearly visible for keyboard navigation
  • Loading and empty states are designed -- custom skeleton animations, branded progress indicators, designed 404 pages, helpful error states
  • Micro-typography is correct -- smart quotes, proper apostrophes, en/em dashes where appropriate, no orphans on headlines, text-wrap: balance on key text

Product applications:

ContextApplicationExample
CursorCustom cursor with interactive-element variantsDogstudio custom cursor system
SelectionBranded ::selection background colorOn-brand highlight that works on all surfaces
ButtonsMagnetic hover effect with subtle pullStudio Freight magnetic buttons
FocusStyled focus-visible rings matching brandAccessible + beautiful focus indicators
LoadingCustom skeleton screens and progress barsLocomotive branded loading sequences
Error statesDesigned 404 and error pagesMemorable, on-brand error experiences

Copy patterns:

  • ::selection { background: var(--color-accent); color: var(--color-light); }
  • cursor: none; on body with custom cursor div following mouse position
  • Magnetic effect: calculate distance between cursor and button center, apply proportional transform
  • Smart quotes: use &ldquo; and &rdquo; or configure your build tool to auto-convert

Ethical boundary: Micro-interactions must enhance usability, not hinder it. Custom cursors must remain functional and visible. Focus states must meet accessibility requirements -- beauty cannot replace visibility. Designed error states must be genuinely helpful, not just clever.

See: references/case-studies.md for agency technique breakdowns on micro-interaction implementation.

Design Process

1. Concept First, Code Second

Before any code, define:

BRAND ESSENCE: What single word captures the soul?
VISUAL TENSION: What opposing forces create interest?
SIGNATURE MOMENT: What will people screenshot and share?
TECHNICAL AMBITION: What pushes the browser's limits?

2. Design the Signature Moment First

Do not start with the header. Start with the thing that defines the experience. The header can be solved later. Every 10/10 project has at least one moment that makes people stop and share: a hero animation never seen before, typography so bold it becomes the visual, an interaction that delights unexpectedly, a scroll sequence that tells a story, or a transition that feels like magic.

Questions to identify your signature:

  1. What will people screenshot?
  2. What will they describe to colleagues?
  3. What will they try to reverse-engineer?
  4. What makes this unmistakably THIS project?

3. Typography Sets Everything

Choose your display typeface first. Let it dictate the color palette mood, the animation style, the spacing rhythm, and the overall personality.

4. Motion Is Not Polish

Prototype animations early. Motion design happens alongside visual design, not after.

5. Ship With Restraint

3 things perfect beats 10 things mediocre. Cut ruthlessly.

Implementation Notes

  1. Start with the signature moment -- design the thing that defines the experience first
  2. Conceptualize desktop-first, build mobile-first -- dream big, implement progressively
  3. Prototype animations early -- motion is not a polish step, it is core to the design
  4. Test on real devices -- simulators lie about performance and feel
  5. Ship with restraint -- 3 things perfect beats 10 things mediocre
  6. Sweat the micro-details -- craft lives in the 1% others skip
  7. Design the states -- hover, focus, loading, empty, error all matter
  8. Own your constraints -- every limitation is a design opportunity
  9. Use project conventions -- if Tailwind 4+ and/or shadcn/ui are available, build on top of them rather than fighting them. Extend their design tokens, customize their components, and use their patterns as a foundation for 10/10 craft

Reference Files

Consult these for detailed implementation:

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy It FailsFix
Using Inter, Roboto, Arial, or system-ui as primary typefaceThese are application fonts, not experience fonts -- they signal generic, not premiumChoose from premium foundries (Pangram Pangram, Dinamo, Grilli Type, Klim) or quality Google alternatives (Space Grotesk, Instrument Serif, Fraunces)
Uniform type scale (everything within 2x of each other)No hierarchy means no gasping moments -- everything feels equally unimportantPush to minimum 10:1 ratio between display and body; viewport-filling type is the goal
Using ease, ease-in, ease-out, or linear easingDefault easing feels mechanical and lifeless -- instantly signals amateur workUse custom cubic-bezier curves: expo out (0.16, 1, 0.3, 1), quart out (0.25, 1, 0.5, 1)
Animating everything simultaneouslySimultaneous animation creates visual noise with no hierarchy or narrativeChoreograph with stagger (80ms between elements), sequence in order of importance
Center-aligning everythingSymmetry is safe but boring -- it creates no tension or visual energyUse asymmetric compositions with intentional grid offsets and bleeding elements
Equal spacing everywhereUniform spacing creates monotony -- the eye has nowhere to rest or focusVary spacing to create rhythm: dense sections followed by breathing room
Pure #000000 black and pure #ffffff whitePure digital colors feel lifeless and harsh -- they signal no design considerationUse warm variants: #0a0a0a (slightly warm black), #fafaf9 (slightly warm white)
Default browser scrollStandard scroll feels mechanical and treats all content as equally importantImplement Lenis or Locomotive Scroll for smooth, weighted, physical scroll feel
Purple-to-blue gradient hero sectionsThe "AI gradient" -- instantly signals generic, trend-following designDevelop a signature color approach specific to the project
No signature moment in the entire experienceWithout a screenshot-worthy moment, the design is competent but forgettableDesign the signature moment FIRST -- the thing people will reverse-engineer
Any emoji in professional interfacesEmoji signal casual/amateur craft and undermine premium positioningUse custom iconography or typographic treatments instead
Parallax on text and critical contentParallax on readable content causes motion sickness and accessibility issuesReserve parallax for decorative, non-essential background elements only
Animations blocking user interactionMotion that prevents scrolling, clicking, or reading is hostile UXEnsure all animations are non-blocking; content remains accessible during transitions
Font Awesome icons used unmodifiedGeneric icon sets signal template-level designCreate custom icons or heavily customize existing ones to match brand personality
Default form stylesUnstyled form elements immediately break the illusion of craftDesign every input, select, checkbox, and button as a branded experience

Quick Diagnostic

QuestionIf NoAction
Does the hero typography make someone pause mid-scroll?Display type is not commanding enoughPush scale contrast to 10:1+, choose a more distinctive typeface, fill the viewport
Would someone screenshot any section and share it?No signature moment existsIdentify one section to make extraordinary -- an animation, scale shift, or interaction
Does the design still read when you blur your eyes?Hierarchy is too flatIncrease contrast between levels -- bigger headlines, more white space, stronger accents
Are all easing curves custom (no ease or linear)?Motion feels default and mechanicalReplace with expo out (0.16, 1, 0.3, 1) or quart out (0.25, 1, 0.5, 1)
Is there asymmetric tension in the composition?Layout feels safe and symmetricalOffset elements from center, let images bleed, vary section density
Do the colors feel invented for THIS project?Palette could belong to any brandDevelop a signature color identity: monochromatic tension, bold signature, or contextual shifting
Is the page load choreographed (not all at once)?Elements pop in simultaneouslyImplement staggered reveal: structure first, then hero, then supporting elements
Does scroll feel custom and weighted?Using default browser scrollImplement Lenis or Locomotive Scroll for smooth, physical scroll behavior
Are micro-details considered (selection, focus, cursor)?Default browser behaviors remainAdd branded selection colors, designed focus states, and considered cursor behavior
Is CLS near zero and LCP under 2.5s?Performance undermines perceived qualitySubset fonts, optimize images (WebP/AVIF), animate only transform/opacity
Does every animation answer "why does this move?"Motion is decorative, not purposefulRemove animations that do not serve narrative, hierarchy, or user guidance
Are focus states both beautiful AND accessible?Accessibility sacrificed for aesthetics or vice versaDesign focus indicators that match brand aesthetic while meeting WCAG visibility requirements

Further Reading

About the Author

This skill synthesizes techniques and principles from the world's most awarded digital design agencies. The primary sources are:

Locomotive (Montreal) -- pioneers of smooth scroll experiences (creators of Locomotive Scroll), known for monochromatic tension palettes, bold typography, and seamless page transitions. Their work for clients like Ubisoft and the National Film Board of Canada defines the standard for immersive web storytelling.

Studio Freight (New York) -- specialists in creative development, known for magnetic interactions, bold signature color palettes, and pushing the technical boundaries of the browser. Their open-source tools and experimental projects influence the broader creative development community.

AREA 17 (New York/Paris) -- a digital product agency known for contextual design systems that adapt to each client's identity, editorial-quality layouts, and the balance of visual ambition with functional clarity. Their work for cultural institutions and media organizations sets the bar for content-driven design.

Active Theory (Los Angeles) -- a creative studio specializing in WebGL, immersive 3D experiences, and interactive storytelling. Their work demonstrates what is possible when technical ambition meets design vision.

Hello Monday (Copenhagen/New York, now part of DEPT) -- known for playful, innovative interactions and page transitions that feel like magic. Their work for brands like Spotify, Adidas, and Google consistently wins top awards.

Additional inspiration drawn from Dogstudio (Belgium), Tonik (Poland), Instrument (Portland), Resn (New Zealand), and the broader community of Awwwards, FWA, CSS Design Awards, and Webby Award winners whose collective work establishes the evolving standard for world-class digital craft.

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