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distill

Strip designs to their essence by removing unnecessary complexity. Great design is simple, powerful, and clean.

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SKILL.md
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Remove unnecessary complexity from designs, revealing the essential elements and creating clarity through ruthless simplification.

MANDATORY PREPARATION

Use the frontend-design skill — it contains design principles, anti-patterns, and the Context Gathering Protocol. Follow the protocol before proceeding — if no design context exists yet, you MUST run teach-impeccable first.


Assess Current State

Analyze what makes the design feel complex or cluttered:

  1. Identify complexity sources:

    • Too many elements: Competing buttons, redundant information, visual clutter
    • Excessive variation: Too many colors, fonts, sizes, styles without purpose
    • Information overload: Everything visible at once, no progressive disclosure
    • Visual noise: Unnecessary borders, shadows, backgrounds, decorations
    • Confusing hierarchy: Unclear what matters most
    • Feature creep: Too many options, actions, or paths forward
  2. Find the essence:

    • What's the primary user goal? (There should be ONE)
    • What's actually necessary vs nice-to-have?
    • What can be removed, hidden, or combined?
    • What's the 20% that delivers 80% of value?

If any of these are unclear from the codebase, STOP and call the AskUserQuestion tool to clarify.

CRITICAL: Simplicity is not about removing features - it's about removing obstacles between users and their goals. Every element should justify its existence.

Plan Simplification

Create a ruthless editing strategy:

  • Core purpose: What's the ONE thing this should accomplish?
  • Essential elements: What's truly necessary to achieve that purpose?
  • Progressive disclosure: What can be hidden until needed?
  • Consolidation opportunities: What can be combined or integrated?

IMPORTANT: Simplification is hard. It requires saying no to good ideas to make room for great execution. Be ruthless.

Simplify the Design

Systematically remove complexity across these dimensions:

Information Architecture

  • Reduce scope: Remove secondary actions, optional features, redundant information
  • Progressive disclosure: Hide complexity behind clear entry points (accordions, modals, step-through flows)
  • Combine related actions: Merge similar buttons, consolidate forms, group related content
  • Clear hierarchy: ONE primary action, few secondary actions, everything else tertiary or hidden
  • Remove redundancy: If it's said elsewhere, don't repeat it here

Visual Simplification

  • Reduce color palette: Use 1-2 colors plus neutrals, not 5-7 colors
  • Limit typography: One font family, 3-4 sizes maximum, 2-3 weights
  • Remove decorations: Eliminate borders, shadows, backgrounds that don't serve hierarchy or function
  • Flatten structure: Reduce nesting, remove unnecessary containers—never nest cards inside cards
  • Remove unnecessary cards: Cards aren't needed for basic layout; use spacing and alignment instead
  • Consistent spacing: Use one spacing scale, remove arbitrary gaps

Layout Simplification

  • Linear flow: Replace complex grids with simple vertical flow where possible
  • Remove sidebars: Move secondary content inline or hide it
  • Full-width: Use available space generously instead of complex multi-column layouts
  • Consistent alignment: Pick left or center, stick with it
  • Generous white space: Let content breathe, don't pack everything tight

Interaction Simplification

  • Reduce choices: Fewer buttons, fewer options, clearer path forward (paradox of choice is real)
  • Smart defaults: Make common choices automatic, only ask when necessary
  • Inline actions: Replace modal flows with inline editing where possible
  • Remove steps: Can signup be one step instead of three? Can checkout be simplified?
  • Clear CTAs: ONE obvious next step, not five competing actions

Content Simplification

  • Shorter copy: Cut every sentence in half, then do it again
  • Active voice: "Save changes" not "Changes will be saved"
  • Remove jargon: Plain language always wins
  • Scannable structure: Short paragraphs, bullet points, clear headings
  • Essential information only: Remove marketing fluff, legalese, hedging
  • Remove redundant copy: No headers restating intros, no repeated explanations, say it once

Code Simplification

  • Remove unused code: Dead CSS, unused components, orphaned files
  • Flatten component trees: Reduce nesting depth
  • Consolidate styles: Merge similar styles, use utilities consistently
  • Reduce variants: Does that component need 12 variations, or can 3 cover 90% of cases?

NEVER:

  • Remove necessary functionality (simplicity ≠ feature-less)
  • Sacrifice accessibility for simplicity (clear labels and ARIA still required)
  • Make things so simple they're unclear (mystery ≠ minimalism)
  • Remove information users need to make decisions
  • Eliminate hierarchy completely (some things should stand out)
  • Oversimplify complex domains (match complexity to actual task complexity)

Verify Simplification

Ensure simplification improves usability:

  • Faster task completion: Can users accomplish goals more quickly?
  • Reduced cognitive load: Is it easier to understand what to do?
  • Still complete: Are all necessary features still accessible?
  • Clearer hierarchy: Is it obvious what matters most?
  • Better performance: Does simpler design load faster?

Document Removed Complexity

If you removed features or options:

  • Document why they were removed
  • Consider if they need alternative access points
  • Note any user feedback to monitor

Remember: You have great taste and judgment. Simplification is an act of confidence - knowing what to keep and courage to remove the rest. As Antoine de Saint-Exupéry said: "Perfection is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."

Repository
pbakaus/impeccable
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