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To create more emotional designs, don't try to force creativity. Instead, actively collect small interactions from other products that made you feel something ('cool,' 'classy,' 'cute'). This builds an intuitive library of emotional patterns to draw upon in your own work.
If your execution skills are still developing, focus on demonstrating strong design taste. Find portfolios you admire and deconstruct them, asking why specific choices were made around spacing, color, and timing. This process builds your design intuition and signals to hiring managers that you have a high quality bar and are coachable.
True design intuition isn't innate; it's built through repetition. The fastest way to learn is to take many "shots on goal." Focus on generating a high quantity of rough, low-fidelity ideas and storyboards, rather than a few polished ones, to accelerate your learning and discovery process.
To cultivate strong design taste without formal training, immerse yourself in best-in-class products. Actively analyze their details, from menus to spacing, and ask *why* they work. This reverse-engineering process builds intuition and raises your personal quality bar faster than theoretical study alone.
Instead of inventing ideas, 'snatch' them from real-life observations. The power lies in using concrete, specific details from these moments—like an overheard conversation. This makes content more original, relatable, and emotionally compelling than generic advice, fostering a deeper audience connection.
When a creator genuinely enjoys the process and infuses a project with playfulness, that energy is palpable to the user. A project completed under stress and tight deadlines often feels sterile and rushed. The creator's emotional state is an invisible but impactful design material.
Many delightful features in the Hand Mirror app, like a toggle that refuses to be turned off, originated from the prompt: 'Wouldn't it be funny if...?' This question is a powerful creative tool for discovering and implementing moments of humor and personality, especially in side projects with less pressure.
To avoid getting lost in endless options, establish a clear vision using descriptive adjectives like "techie," "classical," or "sharp and crisp." This high-level direction acts as a filter, helping you confidently accept or reject ideas and maintain consistency throughout the design process.
Instead of forcing ideas through brainstorming, 'snatch' them from real life—overheard conversations, personal interactions, or song lyrics. This method creates a bank of original stories. The specific, real-world details make the content more compelling and emotionally resonant than generic advice.
Prototyping a new product from scratch risks creating a generic, "AI slop" design. To avoid this, use "inspiration sourcing": find screenshots from other apps (e.g., on Mobbin) that have the design aesthetic you want, and feed them to the AI as a style reference for specific features.
Before starting a project, define its intended feel with key adjectives (e.g., "techie," "classical," "sharp"). This vision becomes a powerful filter, helping you make consistent decisions and resist the temptation to chase trends or get discouraged by other designers' work.