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openai/frontend-skill

openai

frontend-skill

Use when the task asks for a visually strong landing page, website, app, prototype, demo, or game UI. This skill enforces restrained composition, image-led hierarchy, cohesive content structure, and tasteful motion while avoiding generic cards, weak branding, and UI clutter.

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v1.0Saved Apr 20, 2026

Frontend Skill

Use this skill when the quality of the work depends on art direction, hierarchy, restraint, imagery, and motion rather than component count.

Goal: ship interfaces that feel deliberate, premium, and current. Default toward award-level composition: one big idea, strong imagery, sparse copy, rigorous spacing, and a small number of memorable motions.

Working Model

Before building, write three things:

  • visual thesis: one sentence describing mood, material, and energy
  • content plan: hero, support, detail, final CTA
  • interaction thesis: 2-3 motion ideas that change the feel of the page

Each section gets one job, one dominant visual idea, and one primary takeaway or action.

Beautiful Defaults

  • Start with composition, not components.
  • Prefer a full-bleed hero or full-canvas visual anchor.
  • Make the brand or product name the loudest text.
  • Keep copy short enough to scan in seconds.
  • Use whitespace, alignment, scale, cropping, and contrast before adding chrome.
  • Limit the system: two typefaces max, one accent color by default.
  • Default to cardless layouts. Use sections, columns, dividers, lists, and media blocks instead.
  • Treat the first viewport as a poster, not a document.

Landing Pages

Default sequence:

  1. Hero: brand or product, promise, CTA, and one dominant visual
  2. Support: one concrete feature, offer, or proof point
  3. Detail: atmosphere, workflow, product depth, or story
  4. Final CTA: convert, start, visit, or contact

Hero rules:

  • One composition only.
  • Full-bleed image or dominant visual plane.
  • Canonical full-bleed rule: on branded landing pages, the hero itself must run edge-to-edge with no inherited page gutters, framed container, or shared max-width; constrain only the inner text/action column.
  • Brand first, headline second, body third, CTA fourth.
  • No hero cards, stat strips, logo clouds, pill soup, or floating dashboards by default.
  • Keep headlines to roughly 2-3 lines on desktop and readable in one glance on mobile.
  • Keep the text column narrow and anchored to a calm area of the image.
  • All text over imagery must maintain strong contrast and clear tap targets.

If the first viewport still works after removing the image, the image is too weak. If the brand disappears after hiding the nav, the hierarchy is too weak.

Viewport budget:

  • If the first screen includes a sticky/fixed header, that header counts against the hero. The combined header + hero content must fit within the initial viewport at common desktop and mobile sizes.
  • When using 100vh/100svh heroes, subtract persistent UI chrome (calc(100svh - header-height)) or overlay the header instead of stacking it in normal flow.

Apps

Default to Linear-style restraint:

  • calm surface hierarchy
  • strong typography and spacing
  • few colors
  • dense but readable information
  • minimal chrome
  • cards only when the card is the interaction

For app UI, organize around:

  • primary workspace
  • navigation
  • secondary context or inspector
  • one clear accent for action or state

Avoid:

  • dashboard-card mosaics
  • thick borders on every region
  • decorative gradients behind routine product UI
  • multiple competing accent colors
  • ornamental icons that do not improve scanning

If a panel can become plain layout without losing meaning, remove the card treatment.

Imagery

Imagery must do narrative work.

  • Use at least one strong, real-looking image for brands, venues, editorial pages, and lifestyle products.
  • Prefer in-situ photography over abstract gradients or fake 3D objects.
  • Choose or crop images with a stable tonal area for text.
  • Do not use images with embedded signage, logos, or typographic clutter fighting the UI.
  • Do not generate images with built-in UI frames, splits, cards, or panels.
  • If multiple moments are needed, use multiple images, not one collage.

The first viewport needs a real visual anchor. Decorative texture is not enough.

Copy

  • Write in product language, not design commentary.
  • Let the headline carry the meaning.
  • Supporting copy should usually be one short sentence.
  • Cut repetition between sections.
  • Do not include prompt language or design commentary into the UI.
  • Give every section one responsibility: explain, prove, deepen, or convert.

If deleting 30 percent of the copy improves the page, keep deleting.

Utility Copy For Product UI

When the work is a dashboard, app surface, admin tool, or operational workspace, default to utility copy over marketing copy.

  • Prioritize orientation, status, and action over promise, mood, or brand voice.
  • Start with the working surface itself: KPIs, charts, filters, tables, status, or task context. Do not introduce a hero section unless the user explicitly asks for one.
  • Section headings should say what the area is or what the user can do there.
  • Good: "Selected KPIs", "Plan status", "Search metrics", "Top segments", "Last sync".
  • Avoid aspirational hero lines, metaphors, campaign-style language, and executive-summary banners on product surfaces unless specifically requested.
  • Supporting text should explain scope, behavior, freshness, or decision value in one sentence.
  • If a sentence could appear in a homepage hero or ad, rewrite it until it sounds like product UI.
  • If a section does not help someone operate, monitor, or decide, remove it.
  • Litmus check: if an operator scans only headings, labels, and numbers, can they understand the page immediately?

Motion

Use motion to create presence and hierarchy, not noise.

Ship at least 2-3 intentional motions for visually led work:

  • one entrance sequence in the hero
  • one scroll-linked, sticky, or depth effect
  • one hover, reveal, or layout transition that sharpens affordance

Prefer Framer Motion when available for:

  • section reveals
  • shared layout transitions
  • scroll-linked opacity, translate, or scale shifts
  • sticky storytelling
  • carousels that advance narrative, not just fill space
  • menus, drawers, and modal presence effects

Motion rules:

  • noticeable in a quick recording
  • smooth on mobile
  • fast and restrained
  • consistent across the page
  • removed if ornamental only

Hard Rules

  • No cards by default.
  • No hero cards by default.
  • No boxed or center-column hero when the brief calls for full bleed.
  • No more than one dominant idea per section.
  • No section should need many tiny UI devices to explain itself.
  • No headline should overpower the brand on branded pages.
  • No filler copy.
  • No split-screen hero unless text sits on a calm, unified side.
  • No more than two typefaces without a clear reason.
  • No more than one accent color unless the product already has a strong system.

Reject These Failures

  • Generic SaaS card grid as the first impression
  • Beautiful image with weak brand presence
  • Strong headline with no clear action
  • Busy imagery behind text
  • Sections that repeat the same mood statement
  • Carousel with no narrative purpose
  • App UI made of stacked cards instead of layout

Litmus Checks

  • Is the brand or product unmistakable in the first screen?
  • Is there one strong visual anchor?
  • Can the page be understood by scanning headlines only?
  • Does each section have one job?
  • Are cards actually necessary?
  • Does motion improve hierarchy or atmosphere?
  • Would the design still feel premium if all decorative shadows were removed?
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Overall Score

87/100

Grade

A

Excellent

Safety

98

Quality

88

Clarity

90

Completeness

78

Summary

A design guidance skill that teaches AI agents to build visually strong landing pages, websites, apps, and UIs by enforcing art direction, hierarchy, restrained composition, and intentional motion. The skill prioritizes imagery, typography, and spacing over component count, providing concrete rules for hero sections, app UI, copy, and motion patterns.

Detected Capabilities

Visual composition and hierarchy guidanceLanding page structure and sequencingApp UI design patterns and layout principlesImagery selection and cropping criteriaTypography and color system constraintsCopy writing for both marketing and utility contextsMotion and animation strategy for web interfacesMobile and viewport-responsive design considerationsAccessibility for text contrast and tap targets

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

landing page designvisual hierarchyapp UI layoutproduct interfaceweb compositiondashboard designhero sectiontypography system

Risk Signals

INFO

No shell execution, file modification, or network access

Overall skill design
INFO

No secrets, credentials, or environment variable access

Overall skill design
INFO

Apache License 2.0 properly included and referenced

LICENSE.txt

Referenced Domains

External domains referenced in skill content, detected by static analysis.

www.apache.org

Use Cases

  • Design a premium landing page for a product or service
  • Build a visually cohesive marketing website
  • Create a dashboard or admin interface with calm, purposeful hierarchy
  • Prototype an app UI with strong typography and minimal chrome
  • Design a game or interactive demo interface

Quality Notes

  • Excellent clarity: the skill uses concise language, clear section hierarchy, and memorable rules (e.g., 'one big idea, strong imagery, sparse copy')
  • Strong scope definition: limitations are explicit ('no cards by default', 'two typefaces max'), helping agents understand when the skill applies
  • Comprehensive coverage: addresses three distinct contexts (landing pages, apps, product UI) with tailored guidance
  • Actionable rules: 'litmus checks' and 'hard rules' give agents testable criteria for success
  • Good examples of bad patterns: 'Reject These Failures' section clarifies what to avoid
  • Well-structured defaults: 'Beautiful Defaults' and 'Default Sequence' sections provide starting points
  • Viewport and responsive design considerations documented: hero budget, mobile readiness for motion
  • Copy guidance spans both marketing and utility contexts, appropriate for different product types
  • Minor: could benefit from HTML/CSS-specific implementation examples (e.g., how to structure hero markup for full-bleed with constrained text), though this may be intentional to keep guidance design-agnostic
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: Apr 20, 2026

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