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by JasonSage
7 days ago
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I keep a bookmarks folder of websites that have non-cookie-cutter design. If I have an aesthetic in mind I'll use some screenshots of those sites in the prompt and phrase their inclusion as: "Look at these slightly non-standard designs that work really well for me." So far I've only seen Claude look for through-lines and high-level takeaways--"user likes <design feature> based on the screenshots, so I'll include that"--and screenshots aren't currently a granularity level where it can lift specific details or produce something derivative. Other than that I try to encourage specific consideration of: type scale, borders and rounding, padding/whitespace, elevation as shadow vs blur, colors. I don't think one needs to pull every customization lever on every project. |
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I've been designing sites for 32 years, and I've tried almost all the tools. I was very impressed with Stitch, but I've now migrated all my designs to Claude. My aesthetic is born in the simplicity and cleanliness of mid-90s, coupled with modern CSS. I want the purest, simplest HTML, with the simplest CSS and the absolute minimum of JS. Claude generates some of the best looking, most user-friendly designs I've seen. I don't need crazy scroll effects and tons of animations; I just need sites that are easy to read, easy to navigate and let the user get the task done in the quickest way.