quieter
Reduce visual intensity in designs that are too bold, aggressive, or overstimulating, creating a more refined and approachable aesthetic without losing effectiveness.
MANDATORY PREPARATION
Context Gathering (Do This First)
You cannot do a great job without having necessary context, such as target audience (critical), desired use-cases (critical), brand personality/tone, and everything else that a great human designer would need as well.
Attempt to gather these from the current thread or codebase.
- If you don't find exact information and have to infer from existing design and functionality, you MUST STOP and {{ask_instruction}} whether you got it right.
- Otherwise, if you can't fully infer or your level of confidence is medium or lower, you MUST {{ask_instruction}} clarifying questions first to complete your context.
Do NOT proceed until you have answers. Guessing leads to generic design.
Use frontend-design skill
Use the frontend-design skill for design principles and anti-patterns. Do NOT proceed until it has executed and you know all DO's and DON'Ts.
Assess Current State
Analyze what makes the design feel too intense:
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Identify intensity sources:
- Color saturation: Overly bright or saturated colors
- Contrast extremes: Too much high-contrast juxtaposition
- Visual weight: Too many bold, heavy elements competing
- Animation excess: Too much motion or overly dramatic effects
- Complexity: Too many visual elements, patterns, or decorations
- Scale: Everything is large and loud with no hierarchy
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Understand the context:
- What's the purpose? (Marketing vs tool vs reading experience)
- Who's the audience? (Some contexts need energy)
- What's working? (Don't throw away good ideas)
- What's the core message? (Preserve what matters)
If any of these are unclear from the codebase, {{ask_instruction}}
CRITICAL: "Quieter" doesn't mean boring or generic. It means refined, sophisticated, and easier on the eyes. Think luxury, not laziness.
Plan Refinement
Create a strategy to reduce intensity while maintaining impact:
- Color approach: Desaturate or shift to more sophisticated tones?
- Hierarchy approach: Which elements should stay bold (very few), which should recede?
- Simplification approach: What can be removed entirely?
- Sophistication approach: How can we signal quality through restraint?
IMPORTANT: Great quiet design is harder than great bold design. Subtlety requires precision.
Refine the Design
Systematically reduce intensity across these dimensions:
Color Refinement
- Reduce saturation: Shift from fully saturated to 70-85% saturation
- Soften palette: Replace bright colors with muted, sophisticated tones
- Reduce color variety: Use fewer colors more thoughtfully
- Neutral dominance: Let neutrals do more work, use color as accent (10% rule)
- Gentler contrasts: High contrast only where it matters most
- Tinted grays: Use warm or cool tinted grays instead of pure gray—adds sophistication without loudness
- Never gray on color: If you have gray text on a colored background, use a darker shade of that color or transparency instead
Visual Weight Reduction
- Typography: Reduce font weights (900 → 600, 700 → 500), decrease sizes where appropriate
- Hierarchy through subtlety: Use weight, size, and space instead of color and boldness
- White space: Increase breathing room, reduce density
- Borders & lines: Reduce thickness, decrease opacity, or remove entirely
Simplification
- Remove decorative elements: Gradients, shadows, patterns, textures that don't serve purpose
- Simplify shapes: Reduce border radius extremes, simplify custom shapes
- Reduce layering: Flatten visual hierarchy where possible
- Clean up effects: Reduce or remove blur effects, glows, multiple shadows
Motion Reduction
- Reduce animation intensity: Shorter distances (10-20px instead of 40px), gentler easing
- Remove decorative animations: Keep functional motion, remove flourishes
- Subtle micro-interactions: Replace dramatic effects with gentle feedback
- Refined easing: Use ease-out-quart for smooth, understated motion—never bounce or elastic
- Remove animations entirely if they're not serving a clear purpose
Composition Refinement
- Reduce scale jumps: Smaller contrast between sizes creates calmer feeling
- Align to grid: Bring rogue elements back into systematic alignment
- Even out spacing: Replace extreme spacing variations with consistent rhythm
NEVER:
- Make everything the same size/weight (hierarchy still matters)
- Remove all color (quiet ≠ grayscale)
- Eliminate all personality (maintain character through refinement)
- Sacrifice usability for aesthetics (functional elements still need clear affordances)
- Make everything small and light (some anchors needed)
Verify Quality
Ensure refinement maintains quality:
- Still functional: Can users still accomplish tasks easily?
- Still distinctive: Does it have character, or is it generic now?
- Better reading: Is text easier to read for extended periods?
- Sophistication: Does it feel more refined and premium?
Remember: Quiet design is confident design. It doesn't need to shout. Less is more, but less is also harder. Refine with precision and maintain intentionality.