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Designing with Constraints

Limitations aren't obstacles to creativity. They're the structure that makes creativity possible.

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Give a designer a blank canvas and unlimited time, and they'll often produce something mediocre. Give them a tight brief, a small screen, and a deadline, and they'll surprise you. This isn't a paradox - it's how creativity actually works.

Constraints force decisions. When you can't use more than two typefaces, you have to choose carefully. When the page has to load in under a second, every element earns its place. When the interface has to work on a 320px screen, you discover what's truly essential.

Embracing the box

The web itself is a constraint. HTML flows in one direction. CSS has a box model. Browsers have viewport sizes and font rendering quirks. You can fight these constraints or you can work with them, and the results are dramatically different.

The designs I admire most don't look like they were forced through a framework. They look like they grew naturally from the medium, respecting its grain rather than working against it. That only happens when you treat constraints as creative partners rather than enemies.

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