frontend-design
This skill guides creation of distinctive, production-grade frontend interfaces that avoid generic "AI slop" aesthetics. Implement real working code with exceptional attention to aesthetic details and creative choices.
The user provides frontend requirements: a component, page, application, or interface to build. They may include context about the purpose, audience, or technical constraints.
Design Thinking
Before coding, understand the context and commit to a BOLD aesthetic direction:
- Purpose: What problem does this interface solve? Who uses it?
- Tone: Pick an extreme: brutally minimal, maximalist chaos, retro-futuristic, organic/natural, luxury/refined, playful/toy-like, editorial/magazine, brutalist/raw, art deco/geometric, soft/pastel, industrial/utilitarian, etc. There are so many flavors to choose from. Use these for inspiration but design one that is true to the aesthetic direction.
- Constraints: Technical requirements (framework, performance, accessibility).
- Differentiation: What makes this UNFORGETTABLE? What's the one thing someone will remember?
CRITICAL: Choose a clear conceptual direction and execute it with precision. Bold maximalism and refined minimalism both work - the key is intentionality, not intensity.
Then implement working code (HTML/CSS/JS, React, Vue, etc.) that is:
- Production-grade and functional
- Visually striking and memorable
- Cohesive with a clear aesthetic point-of-view
- Meticulously refined in every detail
More from l-yifan/skills
scientific-figure-pro
Generate publication-ready scientific figures in Python/matplotlib with a consistent figures4papers house style. Use when creating or refining academic bar/trend/heatmap/scatter/multi-panel figures, enforcing visual consistency, or exporting paper-ready PNG/PDF/SVG outputs.
39figures4papers-playbook
Locate and adapt real plotting examples from the figures4papers repository. Use when users ask for a figure in the style of specific papers/projects, want the closest existing script template, or need fast script selection by chart type/domain before customization.
33deep-wiki
Access AI-generated documentation and insights for GitHub repositories via DeepWiki. This skill should be used when exploring unfamiliar codebases, understanding repository architecture, finding implementation patterns, or asking questions about how a GitHub project works. Supports any public GitHub repository.
25gkg
Global Knowledge Graph for codebase analysis. This skill should be used when searching for code definitions (functions, classes, methods), finding references to symbols, understanding code structure, analyzing import usage, generating repository maps, or performing impact analysis before refactoring. Supports TypeScript, JavaScript, Python, Java, and more.
21gh-grep
Search real-world code examples across millions of GitHub repositories using grep.app. This skill should be used when looking for implementation patterns, API usage examples, library integration patterns, or production code references. Supports literal code search, regex patterns, and filtering by language/repo/path.
18github
Interact with GitHub repositories, issues, pull requests, and code via the GitHub MCP server. This skill should be used when managing repositories, creating/updating files, working with issues and PRs, searching code/repos/users, creating branches, and performing code reviews. Supports all major GitHub API operations.
16