: Don't waste time deciding between a sidebar or a top nav immediately. Start by designing a single feature (e.g., "flight search") and let the layout evolve naturally from there.
: Avoid picking fonts and colors at the start. Work in grayscale to ensure your visual hierarchy is strong before adding "eye candy". Refactoring UI
is a popular design guide and book by Adam Wathan and Steve Schoger that teaches developers and non-designers how to build beautiful user interfaces through practical, actionable tactics rather than abstract theory . Instead of starting with a full layout or "shell," the book advises focusing on individual functional pieces—like a form or a button—and layering detail only after the core functionality is established. Core Philosophy: Start Small, Iterate Fast : Don't waste time deciding between a sidebar
: Having infinite options leads to "analysis paralysis." Pre-define a small system of colors, font sizes, and spacing (like a multiples-of-four scale) to speed up decision-making. Tactical Design Improvements Refactoring UI Work in grayscale to ensure your visual hierarchy