Skills design-review
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/openclaw/skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/openclaw/skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/aa-on-ai/design-review" ~/.claude/skills/openclaw-skills-design-review && rm -rf "$T"
OpenClaw · Install into ~/.openclaw/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/openclaw/skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.openclaw/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/aa-on-ai/design-review" ~/.openclaw/skills/openclaw-skills-design-review && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
skills/aa-on-ai/design-review/SKILL.mdsource content
Design Review Skill
Core Pack — Always Active
This is a core skill. Apply it on ALL visual and frontend work, no exceptions. You do not need permission or a specific trigger to use this.
When to Use
- Before presenting ANY visual or UX work.
- Treat this as a quality gate, not optional polish.
- Sub-agents doing design/frontend work MUST run this before announcing completion.
Pre-Work: Read Before Building
1. Read the project's guidelines
- Read
or equivalent design system doc first if it exists.guidelines.md - Follow the project's existing components, tokens, and patterns before inventing anything.
- If no formal guidelines exist, inspect the existing product and match its logic.
2. Research before designing
- Check how similar tools solve the same problem before inventing a pattern.
- Use proven references when they exist.
- Quality bar references:
- UX Tools — editorial restraint, typography, calm hierarchy
- Inflight by Ridd — motion, depth, data viz polish
- Linear — dense information, excellent hierarchy, no noise
- Vercel dashboard — spacing, typography, dark mode discipline
3. Check design memory
- Read
for prior design decisions.memory/channels/{channel-name}.md - If memory says Aaron rejected a pattern, don't repeat it.
- If a project brain file is linked from channel memory, read that too.
Aaron's Core Principles
- Restraint IS the design.
- Spacing is the #1 tell.
- Typography hierarchy > color for information architecture.
- Match references at pixel level before adding your own ideas.
- Existing patterns > new patterns.
- Interactive elements should feel polished, not dead.
- If the foundation is wrong, no polish fixes it.
- Good design is centripetal, not centrifugal.
Reference Files
Read only what the task needs. Keep this SKILL lean, load detail on demand:
— hierarchy, scale, pairing, measurereferences/typography.md
— restrained palettes, tinted neutrals, contrast, OKLCHreferences/color.md
— spacing system, rhythm, grouping, layout densityreferences/spacing.md
— timing, easing, reduced motion, interactive feelreferences/motion.md
— patterns Aaron will clock instantly and rejectreferences/anti-patterns.md
For sub-agents
- Read the relevant reference files based on what you're building.
- New layout or dashboard? Read spacing + anti-patterns.
- Type-heavy screen? Read typography + spacing.
- Color or theming work? Read color + anti-patterns.
- Interactive polish? Read motion + anti-patterns.
- If in doubt, at minimum read spacing + anti-patterns.
Pre-Flight Checklist
Run this EVERY TIME before presenting work to Aaron.
Step 1: Visual verification
- Take a screenshot of the rendered result.
- Compare side-by-side with the reference if one exists.
- Check the target viewport, not an arbitrary devtools width.
Step 2: Design audit
- Spacing check — enough breathing room? Default to more.
- Color check — did you add color that wasn't necessary?
- Typography check — is hierarchy clear without leaning on color?
- Pattern check — are you using the project's existing components?
- Interaction check — hover, focus, active states exist and feel intentional.
- Integrity check — no placeholders, dead states, broken assets, or missing data handling.
Step 3: Honesty check
- Is it actually done?
- Does it meet the brief, not an adjacent brief?
- Would you be proud to show this to Aaron cold?
Step 4: Run verification scripts
if you have access to the scripts directory, run these before presenting:
# check for common agent anti-patterns python3 skills/design-review/scripts/anti-pattern-check.py <your-file.tsx> # verify loading, empty, and error states exist python3 skills/design-review/scripts/state-check.py <your-file.tsx> # check semantic HTML, aria labels, alt text, heading hierarchy python3 skills/design-review/scripts/accessibility-check.py <your-file.tsx>
fix any warnings before presenting. these are the cheapest quality checks — they catch the obvious stuff so the human review can focus on judgment calls.
for CI integration, copy
ci/design-eval.py and ci/design-eval.yml into your project to run all three checks on every PR.
Step 5: Present with evidence
- Screenshot of the result
- What you referenced
- Known gaps or uncertainties
- Link to live/deployed version if applicable
Updating This Skill
- After Aaron gives design feedback, capture it.
- Add redirects to
or the relevant reference file.references/anti-patterns.md - Add project-specific decisions to channel memory.
- Goal: don't get the same design feedback twice.