How to Improve Your UI Design Skills

UI design isn’t just pretty pixels, it’s precision. In this packed guide, you’ll learn how to craft clean, intuitive, wow-worthy interfaces that users love (and actually know how to use).

How to Improve Your UI Design Skills
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Read time: under 9 minutes

Want better UI design skills?

There’s no doubt about it: mastering UI design is a marathon, not a sprint. If you’re a UX designer looking to up your UI game, you’re in the right place.
UI design is where aesthetics meet logic. It’s where your layout choices guide users effortlessly, or leave them rage-quitting after 3 clicks.
In this blog, we’ll dive into strategies to seriously sharpen your UI design skills, upgrade your visual problem-solving, and help you move from “meh” mockups to pixel-perfect confidence.
Let’s go 🚀
 

Understanding the UI fundamentals

Before you dive headfirst into flashy gradients and fancy microinteractions, let’s talk basics. Behind every jaw-dropping interface is a designer who actually understands why it works.
Here are six design principles every UX designer needs to really get:
 
6 UI fundamentals
6 UI fundamentals

1. Balance

Ever look at a design and just… feel like something’s off? That’s probably poor balance.
  • Symmetrical: Feels clean, structured, and traditional (think banking apps).
  • Asymmetrical: A bit more edgy, dynamic, and modern (hello, editorial sites 👋).
🧠 Quick example:
Instagram balances symmetry in grid layouts with asymmetrical UI in Stories and Reels to keep things engaging without overwhelming the user.

2. Contrast

Contrast is your cheat code for visual hierarchy. It helps users figure out what’s important. Fast. Use contrast through:
  • Weight: thick vs. thin fonts
  • Size: big bold title vs. body text
  • Color: black text on white > gray on light gray
🧠 Quick example:
Netflix uses stark contrast in its UI, red buttons on a dark background, to draw attention exactly where it wants: “Play” or “Next Episode.”

3. Focus

If everything screams for attention, nothing gets noticed. You need a visual focal point. That might be:
  • A killer headline
  • A bold CTA button
  • A key product image
🧠 Quick example:
Airbnb highlights “Search” as the main focus, minimizing distractions so users immediately engage with the booking flow.

4. White Space

White space isn't wasted space, it's breathing room. It makes your design digestible, elegant, and less like a UI panic attack.
🧠 Quick example:
Google’s homepage is a quintessential example of effective use of white space.
Google looked at clutter, said “no thanks,” and gave white space the spotlight, so your only option is to do exactly what they want: search. Clean, iconic, and quietly bossy.

5. Typography

Good UI typography doesn’t scream. It speaks with clarity and purpose. Great UX designers use type to guide, not confuse.
Keep in mind:
  • Consistency: Two fonts max, please.
  • Hierarchy: Headlines, subheads, body… make it obvious.
🧠 Quick example:
Apple’s typography choices reinforce brand elegance. From product pages to iOS interfaces, their use of San Francisco is deliberate, readable, and oh-so-Apple.

6. Color theory

Colors evoke emotions. They also shape perception, behavior, and brand recall. Use it intentionally:
  • Complementary colors add bold energy.
  • Analogous colors soothe and unify.
🧠 Quick example:
Spotify’s green isn’t just a vibe, it’s a strategic glow-up. On dark mode, it pops like neon at a rave, guiding your clicks while quietly winning at accessibility.
 

Research and inspiration

Jumping straight into Figma to design a shiny UI screen without doing research is like decorating a cake before baking it. Looks sweet but it falls apart.
Smart UX designers know the secret: the real magic happens before the pixels.
 
Research and inspiration
Research and inspiration

1. User research

If you’re not talking to your users, you’re designing in the dark and probably bumping into the wrong problems. Use:
  • Surveys for breadth
  • Interviews for depth
You’re not just gathering data, you’re mining gold. Pain points? That’s your design brief in disguise.
 
💡
Pro tip: Use a tool like Lookback or Maze to record usability sessions and analyze where users hesitate or drop off. Watching someone struggle to find your CTA is humbling and wildly helpful.
 

2. Competitor analysis

No need to reinvent the wheel, just make it roll better.
  • Study your competitors' UI patterns
  • Spot what works (and what straight-up sucks)
  • Find gaps you can fill with smarter, cleaner, more lovable design
 
💡
Pro tip: Run a heuristic review of 3 competitor apps. Note what they’re doing across layout, color, typography, and interactions. Then write one sentence per app: “I’d improve this by…” That sentence becomes your next design idea.
 

3. Sketching and wireframing

Before jumping into high-fidelity land, get messy.
  • Paper sketches: Fast, disposable, and surprisingly liberating
This is the “thinking” phase of design. The rough draft where good ideas get born—and bad ones die fast.
 
💡
Pro tip: Set a 10-minute timer and sketch 3 different layout ideas before you touch your design tool.
It forces creative exploration and keeps you from marrying your first (and usually weakest) idea.
 

4. Prototyping and testing

Turn your static wireframes into clickable prototypes using tools like Figma or Marvel. These let users feel what your UI actually does.
Then? Test it. Break it. Watch real humans use it while you nervously sip coffee.
  • A/B tests = Which version wins?
Nothing beats watching users not use your design the way you imagined.
 
💡
Pro tip: Ask test users just one question after they use your prototype:
“What would you expect to happen next?” If their answer doesn’t match your intent, congrats, you’ve just found a usability gap.
 
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Refining your craft

The world of UI design moves fast. Blink, and there's a new tool, trend, or technique reshaping what “good design” means.
Great UX designers don’t just keep up, they stay curious. Here’s how to keep your skills razor-sharp (without burning out):
 
Refining your craft
Refining your craft

1. Continuous learning

If you're not learning, you're lagging. The best designers treat learning like leg day, you don't skip it just because you nailed it once.
  • Revisit old projects and redesign them with your current knowledge.
 
💡
Pro tip: Use a “learning sprint” model: pick one UI topic (e.g. color contrast, mobile nav, button states), study it for 5 days, and build a micro-project to apply it.
 

2. Online courses and tutorials

You don’t need a degree to be a killer designer, but you do need to be deliberate about how you learn. Best platforms for learning UI design:
  • SuperHi – Fun, practical courses in UI, animation, and creative coding
  • Coursera – Great for structured foundations (Google UX Design, anyone?)
 
💡
Pro tip: Don’t just watch, build alongside. Use split-screen mode and create mini-projects while following a course. Passive watching ≠ skill-building.
 

3. Design blogs and communities

UI design isn’t just craft, it’s culture. That means knowing the trends, the debates, and the UI "hot takes" that shape how people design.
Must-read blogs:
  • UX Collective – Design stories from practitioners, for practitioners
  • UX Playbook – Actionable tips, tool guides, and modern UI trends
Communities worth joining:
  • Behance – Showcase your case studies, not just your shots
  • Figma Community – Get free UI kits, plugins, and see how others solve UI puzzles
 
💡
Pro tip: Follow 5 designers whose work challenges your taste. Save their projects. Then recreate a screen from scratch to reverse-engineer their brilliance. You’ll learn more than you think.
 

Practice and feedback

Watching tutorials is great, but if you’re not applying what you’ve learned, it’s just mental window shopping.
Want to become dangerous with UI design? You need to build stuff. Break stuff. And most importantly, get roasted lovingly by your peers.
 
Practice and feedback
Practice and feedback

1. Personal projects

Personal projects are where you stop playing it safe and start exploring your weirdest, wildest ideas.
  • Redesign the UI of an app you love but secretly think is ugly
  • Build a niche product for a problem only you care about
  • Invent a fake brand and create an entire design system for it (logo, UI, mobile, the works)
 
💡
Pro tip: Scope it small. Instead of rebuilding the whole Spotify app, just redesign the “Now Playing” screen. Bite-sized projects are more fun, and you’ll actually finish them.
 

2. Peer feedback

You can’t improve what you don’t see. That’s where feedback steps in, with a flashlight and a megaphone.
  • Join weekly design critique groups (on Slack, Discord, or local meetups)
 
💡
Pro tip: Ask better questions when sharing your work. Instead of “Thoughts?”, try:
  • “Does this flow feel intuitive to you?”
  • Specific questions lead to useful answers.
  • “Any spots where you'd hesitate or get confused?”
 

Advanced techniques

Once you’ve nailed the fundamentals and shipped a few solid projects, it’s time to spice things up.
Think animation, 3D elements, and building your own personal design system like a UI chef who knows their secret sauce.
Here’s how to go from “good” to “how-did-you-even-make-that?!”
 
Advanced techniques
Advanced techniques

1. Motion design and animation

Static screens are so 2010. Today’s UIs move. They bounce, glide, slide, and respond, because motion makes interfaces feel alive, intuitive, and delightful.
Tools to check out:
 
More UI animation tools:
 
💡
Pro tip: Don’t overdo it. Start with one animation that solves a real UX problem (like showing progress or feedback). If it feels cinematic… tone it down.
 

2. 3D elements

Once reserved for game designers and Pixar interns, 3D is now sliding into modern UI, with flair. Whether it’s playful product previews or immersive dashboards, 3D can add visual weight and uniqueness to your work.
Tools to try:
  • Blender – Free, powerful, and yes, a little intimidating
  • Spline – The web-based darling for interactive 3D in UI
  • Dora – Real-time 3D with a game engine soul and a no-code heart
 
💡
Pro tip: Use 3D for storytelling or focus. A spinning product, a depth-based CTA, just don’t turn your UI into a museum of floating objects.
 

3. Reusable components

Advanced designers don’t just design, they systematize. Reusable components are the cheat code to speed, scale, and sanity.
  • In Figma, use components, variants, and auto layout to create flexible building blocks
  • In Sketch, use symbols for shared styles and scalable UI patterns
  • In real life, stop redoing buttons 15 times, make one, use it everywhere
 
💡
Pro tip: Start with atomic design. Build tiny UI atoms (buttons, inputs), then combine them into molecules (cards, modals). Before you know it, you’ve got a full-blown design system, and a much faster workflow.
 
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Tools and resources

You can have the best ideas in the world, but without the right tools, they stay stuck in your brain or your notebook. And no, switching between 7 different apps doesn’t count as “workflow.”
Here’s how to build a streamlined, supercharged UI design toolkit that actually works for you, not against you.
 
Tools and resources
Tools and resources

1. Design tools

Top tools every UI designer should get cozy with:
  • Pen & paper – Still undefeated for early ideation (seriously)
  • Marvel – Turn flat screens into tappable, testable flows in minutes

2. Resources

Good UI design is often less about reinventing the wheel, and more about knowing where the good wheels already are. Here are resources to bookmark:

Color palette tools

  • Coolors – Hit spacebar and boom: instant color combos
  • Adobe Color – For building palettes based on color theory and harmony rules

Typography resources

  • Google Fonts – Free, accessible, and reliable across platforms
  • Typewolf – Curated, stylish, and packed with font pairing inspiration

Pattern libraries

  • Mobbin – UI inspiration from real apps, sorted by components and platforms
  • UI Patterns – Classic solutions for common UI challenges
 

Personal development

You can design the most pixel-perfect interface on Earth. But if you can’t explain your thinking, empathize with users, or survive a stakeholder meeting without wanting to flip a desk, you’re not going far.
Soft skills aren’t “nice to have”, they’re the secret sauce behind successful UI designers.
 
Soft skills quote
Soft skills quote

1. Communication and empathy

Design isn’t just what you do on a screen, it’s how you think, talk, listen, and collaborate.
  • Empathy helps you design not just for people, but with people in mind

💬 Stakeholder communication

Learn to speak business fluently. Translate user needs into business goals and vice versa. Ask the right questions, frame the right problems, and suddenly… you’re not just the designer, you’re the strategist in the room.

🧠 Empathy mapping

Before you wireframe, map it out. Empathy maps help you get into the user's head, what they see, feel, think, and do—so your designs aren’t just beautiful, they’re believable.
 
💡
Pro tip: Next time you're in a meeting, reframe a comment like this: “What I’m hearing from the user side is...”
Stakeholders will love you. Users will trust you.
 

2. Building a strong portfolio

Your portfolio isn’t just a gallery, it’s a narrative.
The best portfolios aren’t the flashiest, they’re the clearest. They walk people through your brain: the challenges you faced, the thinking behind your choices, and how your designs made an impact.
  • Visual showcase – Clean layout. Great type. Screens that don’t make people squint.
  • Contextual informationWhat was the problem? Who was it for? What constraints did you juggle? Tell us the journey.
“When presenting your portfolio, focus on the ‘why’ behind your design decisions. Employers are interested in your thought process, not just the end result.”
 
💡
Pro tip: Use this structure for every case study: Problem → Process → Pivot → Result
This simple flow keeps readers engaged and helps them see your strategic mind—not just your shiny screens.
 

Common pitfalls and how to avoid them

Every designer’s been there, chasing perfection, rushing ahead, or ignoring that one user who said your flow made no sense. UI design isn’t just about what you add; it’s also about what you avoid.
Here are three of the most common traps, and how to gracefully sidestep them:
 
3 common pitfalls
3 common pitfalls

Overcomplication

You don’t need seven gradients, five fonts, and a parallax scroll just to show off. In fact, that’s how your interface turns into a UI anxiety attack.
The fix: Strip it down. Ask yourself:
“If I remove this, does the design still work?”
If the answer is yes, delete it. Less is more. Always.
💡
Pro move: Build your design in grayscale first. If it works without color, you’ve nailed the essentials.
 

Ignoring user feedback

You might love your design. Your users? Not so much.
Ignoring feedback (especially from usability tests) is like baking a cake without tasting it, you won’t know it’s dry until it’s too late.
The fix:
  • Run quick user tests (even with 3–5 people)
  • Don’t defend your design—listen
  • Look for patterns in pain points, not outliers
💡
Pro move: Turn negative feedback into a checklist for your next iteration. Don’t take it personally, take it seriously.
 

Skipping wireframes

Going straight to high-fidelity without wireframing is like hanging curtains before you build the walls.
Sure, it looks nice, until the whole thing falls apart.
The fix:
Start with low-fidelity wireframes to focus on structure, layout, and flow. Keep it ugly, fast, and flexible.
💡
Pro move: Set a timer for 15 minutes and sketch 3 layout ideas before jumping into Figma. Your future self will thank you.
 

Emphasizing user-centric design

You’re not designing for yourself. You’re designing for real people, on old phones, slow Wi-Fi, with different abilities, experiences, and expectations.
User-centric UI design means stepping outside your own bubble and asking: “Who’s being left out?”
Then? You design to include them.
 
Emphasizing user-centric design
Emphasizing user-centric design

Empathy and accessibility

Empathy isn’t just a nice buzzword, it’s your design north star. Great UI design considers:
  • How users of all backgrounds access content
  • How visual, cognitive, or motor impairments might affect usability
  • Whether your design feels intuitive to someone who’s never seen it before
Accessibility isn’t a final checkbox. It should bake into your entire process, like salt in a good recipe.
 
💡
Pro tip: Use Axe, or even Figma’s color contrast checker to audit accessibility before handing off. Build habits, not hacks.
 

Inclusive design

Designing inclusively = designing for more people. That means more reach, more impact, and yes, more conversions. Use resources like:
  • Axe – An easy way to spot and fix accessibility bugs
🧠 Real-world example: Microsoft’s inclusive design
Microsoft doesn’t treat exclusions as edge cases, they treat them as design insights. Their approach?
"Solve for one, extend to many."
By focusing on users with different abilities, Microsoft ends up improving the experience for everyone, not just the few.
 
💡
Pro tip:
Next time you design a UI component, ask:
“Would this work for someone using only a keyboard?”
If not, it’s time for a rethink.
 

Design trends move fast. Blink, and suddenly that glassmorphism-heavy dashboard you loved is now giving “retro startup MVP.” If you're not evolving, your UI starts to feel like yesterday’s internet.
Here’s how to stay current, without becoming a design trend zombie.
 
Keeping up with trends meme
Keeping up with trends meme

Stay updated

New tools drop. New patterns emerge. What was “innovative” last year might be clunky today. Staying informed is part of the job. Follow:
  • Muzli – Trendy UI inspo in your inbox
  • Sidebar – A daily digest of the best design links

Minimalism and simplicity

Designers are stripping things down and keeping only what matters, and users are loving it.
  • Big fonts
  • Generous white space
  • Thoughtful, intuitive navigation
  • Fewer buttons, clearer flows
Think clarity over cleverness. Think “ahh” over “umm.”

Micro-interactions

A button that gently pulses. A card that expands smoothly. A loading animation that makes you smile instead of scream. Micro-interactions are like seasoning, they’re not the main dish, but they make everything taste better.
Use them to:
  • Show system status
  • Guide user behavior
  • Create delightful moments

Future-forward: exploring AR/VR in UI Design

While most of the web is still flat, AR/VR is the next interface frontier. Spatial UIs, immersive flows, and real-world interactions are slowly but surely becoming mainstream.
Tools to explore:
  • Unity – Industry standard for interactive 3D and AR/VR
  • Spark AR – For building filters and lightweight AR experiences
  • Unreal Engine – High-fidelity visuals, widely used in gaming and immersive UX
 

Before you open yet another Figma file

Becoming better at UI design isn’t just about pushing pixels, it’s about pushing yourself.
You’ve got the blueprint now: master the boring stuff (that actually matters), play with new ideas, listen to humans, embrace critique, and stay curious enough to keep growing.
Because great UI? It’s not just how it looks. It’s how it feels.
And that takes patience, practice, and a healthy mix of art, science, and “let’s try this weird thing and see what happens.”
So go forth. Design boldly. Iterate often.
And maybe—just maybe—have a little fun while you’re at it.
Happy designing, you brilliant pixel nerd ✌️
 

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Talia Hartwell

Written by

Talia Hartwell

Senior Product Designer

     
     

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