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bolder skill

/ai/skills/bolder

This skill amplifies visual impact of safe designs by applying distinctive typography and layout tweaks while preserving usability and accessibility.

This is most likely a fork of the bolder skill from pbakaus
npx playbooks add skill steveclarke/dotfiles --skill bolder

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

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SKILL.md
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---
name: bolder
description: Amplify safe or boring designs to make them more visually interesting and stimulating. Increases impact while maintaining usability.
user-invokable: true
args:
  - name: target
    description: The feature or component to make bolder (optional)
    required: false
---

Increase visual impact and personality in designs that are too safe, generic, or visually underwhelming, creating more engaging and memorable experiences.

## 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 too safe or boring:

1. **Identify weakness sources**:
   - **Generic choices**: System fonts, basic colors, standard layouts
   - **Timid scale**: Everything is medium-sized with no drama
   - **Low contrast**: Everything has similar visual weight
   - **Static**: No motion, no energy, no life
   - **Predictable**: Standard patterns with no surprises
   - **Flat hierarchy**: Nothing stands out or commands attention

2. **Understand the context**:
   - What's the brand personality? (How far can we push?)
   - What's the purpose? (Marketing can be bolder than financial dashboards)
   - Who's the audience? (What will resonate?)
   - What are the constraints? (Brand guidelines, accessibility, performance)

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

**CRITICAL**: "Bolder" doesn't mean chaotic or garish. It means distinctive, memorable, and confident. Think intentional drama, not random chaos.

**WARNING - AI SLOP TRAP**: When making things "bolder," AI defaults to the same tired tricks: cyan/purple gradients, glassmorphism, neon accents on dark backgrounds, gradient text on metrics. These are the OPPOSITE of bold—they're generic. Review ALL the DON'T guidelines in the frontend-design skill before proceeding. Bold means distinctive, not "more effects."

## Plan Amplification

Create a strategy to increase impact while maintaining coherence:

- **Focal point**: What should be the hero moment? (Pick ONE, make it amazing)
- **Personality direction**: Maximalist chaos? Elegant drama? Playful energy? Dark moody? Choose a lane.
- **Risk budget**: How experimental can we be? Push boundaries within constraints.
- **Hierarchy amplification**: Make big things BIGGER, small things smaller (increase contrast)

**IMPORTANT**: Bold design must still be usable. Impact without function is just decoration.

## Amplify the Design

Systematically increase impact across these dimensions:

### Typography Amplification
- **Replace generic fonts**: Swap system fonts for distinctive choices (see frontend-design skill for inspiration)
- **Extreme scale**: Create dramatic size jumps (3x-5x differences, not 1.5x)
- **Weight contrast**: Pair 900 weights with 200 weights, not 600 with 400
- **Unexpected choices**: Variable fonts, display fonts for headlines, condensed/extended widths, monospace as intentional accent (not as lazy "dev tool" default)

### Color Intensification
- **Increase saturation**: Shift to more vibrant, energetic colors (but not neon)
- **Bold palette**: Introduce unexpected color combinations—avoid the purple-blue gradient AI slop
- **Dominant color strategy**: Let one bold color own 60% of the design
- **Sharp accents**: High-contrast accent colors that pop
- **Tinted neutrals**: Replace pure grays with tinted grays that harmonize with your palette
- **Rich gradients**: Intentional multi-stop gradients (not generic purple-to-blue)

### Spatial Drama
- **Extreme scale jumps**: Make important elements 3-5x larger than surroundings
- **Break the grid**: Let hero elements escape containers and cross boundaries
- **Asymmetric layouts**: Replace centered, balanced layouts with tension-filled asymmetry
- **Generous space**: Use white space dramatically (100-200px gaps, not 20-40px)
- **Overlap**: Layer elements intentionally for depth

### Visual Effects
- **Dramatic shadows**: Large, soft shadows for elevation (but not generic drop shadows on rounded rectangles)
- **Background treatments**: Mesh patterns, noise textures, geometric patterns, intentional gradients (not purple-to-blue)
- **Texture & depth**: Grain, halftone, duotone, layered elements—NOT glassmorphism (it's overused AI slop)
- **Borders & frames**: Thick borders, decorative frames, custom shapes (not rounded rectangles with colored border on one side)
- **Custom elements**: Illustrative elements, custom icons, decorative details that reinforce brand

### Motion & Animation
- **Entrance choreography**: Staggered, dramatic page load animations with 50-100ms delays
- **Scroll effects**: Parallax, reveal animations, scroll-triggered sequences
- **Micro-interactions**: Satisfying hover effects, click feedback, state changes
- **Transitions**: Smooth, noticeable transitions using ease-out-quart/quint/expo (not bounce or elastic—they cheapen the effect)

### Composition Boldness
- **Hero moments**: Create clear focal points with dramatic treatment
- **Diagonal flows**: Escape horizontal/vertical rigidity with diagonal arrangements
- **Full-bleed elements**: Use full viewport width/height for impact
- **Unexpected proportions**: Golden ratio? Throw it out. Try 70/30, 80/20 splits

**NEVER**:
- Add effects randomly without purpose (chaos ≠ bold)
- Sacrifice readability for aesthetics (body text must be readable)
- Make everything bold (then nothing is bold - need contrast)
- Ignore accessibility (bold design must still meet WCAG standards)
- Overwhelm with motion (animation fatigue is real)
- Copy trendy aesthetics blindly (bold means distinctive, not derivative)

## Verify Quality

Ensure amplification maintains usability and coherence:

- **NOT AI slop**: Does this look like every other AI-generated "bold" design? If yes, start over.
- **Still functional**: Can users accomplish tasks without distraction?
- **Coherent**: Does everything feel intentional and unified?
- **Memorable**: Will users remember this experience?
- **Performant**: Do all these effects run smoothly?
- **Accessible**: Does it still meet accessibility standards?

**The test**: If you showed this to someone and said "AI made this bolder," would they believe you immediately? If yes, you've failed. Bold means distinctive, not "more AI effects."

Remember: Bold design is confident design. It takes risks, makes statements, and creates memorable experiences. But bold without strategy is just loud. Be intentional, be dramatic, be unforgettable.

Overview

This skill amplifies safe or boring designs to make them more visually interesting and stimulating while preserving usability and accessibility. It provides a structured workflow: gather context, analyze what’s holding the design back, plan a controlled amplification strategy, and apply targeted changes across typography, color, space, effects, and motion.

How this skill works

First, I collect critical context (audience, use cases, brand personality, constraints) and will not proceed until those details are confirmed. I run the frontend-design checks to gather DOs and DON’Ts, then assess the current state for generic choices, timid scale, low contrast, flat hierarchy, or predictability. Finally I create a prioritized amplification plan and produce concrete recommendations and assets that increase impact without breaking usability or accessibility.

When to use it

  • When your product or page feels generic, forgettable, or visually flat
  • Before a redesign where you want a memorable visual identity without compromising UX
  • When marketing assets must increase conversion and user recall
  • When brand personality needs clearer expression through UI
  • When you need a bold aesthetic that still meets accessibility and performance constraints

Best practices

  • Always gather explicit context: target audience, use cases, brand tone, and constraints before any design work
  • Run the frontend-design skill to collect design principles and anti-patterns first
  • Pick one focal hero moment and amplify it—don’t make everything bold
  • Increase contrast through scale, weight, and color rather than piling on effects
  • Favor intentional drama (scale, asymmetry, texture) over trendy, generic effects
  • Validate changes for readability, accessibility (WCAG), and performance before rollout

Example use cases

  • Make a conservative SaaS dashboard feel more confident for brand refresh without harming task efficiency
  • Give marketing landing pages stronger personality to improve conversion and memorability
  • Turn an app’s onboarding flows from bland to delightful while keeping clarity and speed
  • Elevate creator portfolios or product showcases to be more expressive and distinctive
  • Refresh internal tools so higher-impact elements guide attention without distracting users

FAQ

What information do you absolutely need before starting?

I need target audience, primary use-cases, brand personality/tone, constraints (accessibility, existing brand rules, performance), and examples of current screens. Without this, I will pause and request clarification.

Will these changes hurt accessibility or performance?

No—every amplification includes checks and constraints to maintain WCAG contrast/readability and consider animation limits and performance budgets.

Do you rely on trendy effects like glassmorphism or purple gradients?

No. The goal is distinctive, not derivative. I avoid generic AI-slop and use intentional color, scale, texture, and motion choices instead.