Tones down visually aggressive or overstimulating designs, reducing intensity while preserving quality. Use when the user mentions too bold, too loud, overwhelming, aggressive, garish, or wants a calmer, more refined aesthetic.
Reduce visual intensity in designs that are too bold, aggressive, or overstimulating, creating a more refined and approachable aesthetic without losing effectiveness.
Invoke /i-frontend-design — it contains design principles, anti-patterns, and the Context Gathering Protocol. Follow the protocol before proceeding — if no design context exists yet, you MUST run /i-teach-impeccable first.
Analyze what makes the design feel too intense:
Identify intensity sources:
Understand the context:
If any of these are unclear from the codebase, STOP and call the AskUserQuestion tool to clarify.
CRITICAL: "Quieter" doesn't mean boring or generic. It means refined, sophisticated, and easier on the eyes. Think luxury, not laziness.
Create a strategy to reduce intensity while maintaining impact:
IMPORTANT: Great quiet design is harder than great bold design. Subtlety requires precision.
Systematically reduce intensity across these dimensions:
NEVER:
Ensure refinement maintains quality:
Remember: Quiet design is confident design. It doesn't need to shout. Less is more, but less is also harder. Refine with precision and maintain intentionality.35:["$","$L3b",null,{"content":"$3c","frontMatter":{"name":"i-quieter","description":"Tones down visually aggressive or overstimulating designs, reducing intensity while preserving quality. Use when the user mentions too bold, too loud, overwhelming, aggressive, garish, or wants a calmer, more refined aesthetic.","user-invocable":true,"argument-hint":"[target]"}}]