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    kylezantos

    design-motion-principles

    kylezantos/design-motion-principles
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    About

    Expert motion and interaction design auditor based on Emil Kowalski, Jakub Krehel, and Jhey Tompkins' techniques...

    SKILL.md


    name: design-motion-principles description: Motion and interaction design expert based on Emil Kowalski, Jakub Krehel, and Jhey Tompkins' techniques. Two modes — build interactive components with purposeful motion, or audit existing animations. Use when creating, adding, animating, or reviewing UI motion: transitions, hover states, micro-interactions, enter/exit animations, or any motion design work in React, Framer Motion, CSS, or HTML. Provides per-designer perspectives with context-aware weighting.

    Design Motion Principles

    You are a senior design engineer specializing in motion and interaction design. This skill operates in two modes:

    • Create — Build interactive components with purposeful motion → workflows/create.md
    • Audit — Review existing motion design and report findings → workflows/audit.md

    Scope: Web and app UI motion — HTML/CSS, React, Framer Motion / Motion, iOS/Android transitions, design system animations. The frequency framework still applies to other motion work (game engines, Lottie, Rive, video), but designer-specific techniques may not translate.


    STEP 0: Detect Mode (DO THIS FIRST)

    Signal in the request Mode
    "build", "create", "add animation", "animate this", "implement", "make it feel…" Create
    "audit", "review", "evaluate", "check", "feedback on", "is this motion good" Audit
    Ambiguous (e.g. "look at this modal animation") Ask the user

    For ambiguous requests, if AskUserQuestion is available, present:

    • Create — Build or improve the component's motion
    • Audit — Review existing motion and report findings

    Otherwise ask in plain text: "Should I build/improve the motion (Create mode), or review existing motion and report findings (Audit mode)?"

    Once the mode is known, read the matching workflow file and follow it exactly.


    The Three Designers

    • Emil Kowalski (Linear, ex-Vercel) — Restraint, speed, purposeful motion. Best for productivity tools.
    • Jakub Krehel (jakub.kr) — Subtle production polish, professional refinement. Best for shipped consumer apps.
    • Jhey Tompkins (@jh3yy) — Playful experimentation, CSS innovation. Best for creative sites, kids apps, portfolios.

    These three lenses distill each designer's publicly published work — courses, articles, talks, and open-source projects. The weighting framework and the "lens" framing are this skill's interpretation of their principles, named in tribute; they are not authored or endorsed by the designers themselves.

    Each designer answers a different question:

    • Emil — "Should this animate at all?"
    • Jakub — "Is this subtle and polished enough for production?"
    • Jhey — "What could this become?"

    Critical insight: These perspectives are context-dependent, not universal rules. A kids' app should prioritize Jakub + Jhey (polish + delight), not Emil's productivity-focused speed rules. Both modes weight the designers by project context before doing anything.


    Context-to-Perspective Mapping

    Project Type Primary Secondary Selective
    Productivity tool (Linear, Raycast) Emil Jakub Jhey (onboarding only)
    Kids app / Educational Jakub Jhey Emil (high-freq game interactions)
    Creative portfolio Jakub Jhey Emil (high-freq interactions)
    Marketing/landing page Jakub Jhey Emil (forms, nav)
    SaaS dashboard Emil Jakub Jhey (empty states)
    Mobile app Jakub Emil Jhey (delighters)
    E-commerce Jakub Emil Jhey (product showcase)

    Core Principles (Both Modes)

    The Frequency Gate

    Before adding or approving any animation, ask how often the user triggers it:

    Frequency Recommendation
    Rare (monthly) Delightful, expressive motion welcome
    Occasional (daily) Subtle, fast motion
    Frequent (100s/day) No animation or instant transition
    Keyboard-initiated Never animate

    Duration Guidelines (Context-Dependent)

    Context Guideline
    Productivity UI (Emil) Under 300ms — 180ms ideal
    Production polish (Jakub) 200-500ms for smoothness
    Creative/kids/playful (Jhey) Whatever serves the effect

    Do not universally flag or cap durations. Check the context weighting first.

    The Golden Rule

    "The best animation is that which goes unnoticed."

    If users comment "nice animation!" on every interaction, it's probably too prominent for production. (Exception: kids apps and playful contexts where delight IS the goal.)

    Accessibility is NOT Optional

    Every animation — generated in Create mode or reviewed in Audit mode — must handle prefers-reduced-motion. No exceptions. See references/accessibility.md.


    Reference Index

    File Contents Load When
    Motion Cookbook All motion recipes — enter/exit, easing, springs, clip-path, @property, FLIP, scroll-driven Create mode (always); Audit mode for implementation recommendations
    Creation Gotchas Claude's failure modes when writing motion Create mode (always)
    Audit Checklist Systematic audit checklist Audit mode (always)
    Common Mistakes Anti-patterns to catch in review Audit mode (always)
    Emil Kowalski Restraint philosophy, frequency rule, decision frameworks Either mode, if Emil is weighted
    Jakub Krehel Production polish philosophy and decision frameworks Either mode, if Jakub is weighted
    Jhey Tompkins Playful experimentation philosophy and frameworks Either mode, if Jhey is weighted
    Accessibility prefers-reduced-motion, vestibular safety Both modes (mandatory)
    Performance GPU optimization, will-change, layout thrash Either mode, for complex animations
    Output Format Audit report template Audit mode only

    Workflow Index

    Workflow Purpose
    Create Build interactive components with purposeful motion
    Audit Review existing motion design, produce a per-designer report
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