Hello @moksh_garg
Great job indeed. Figr.design materializes a concept that has limitless applications. Thanks for being a pioneer.
Collecting all of the best/most interesting web page designs and recreating them in editable Figma block templates inside a fully searchable catalog is a powerful idea.
P.S.: I observe that Figr.design would benefit from some refined UI design as the left column is a bit chaotic as well as the noise created by the top menus.
*I am writing a short review of Figr for the newsletter "Curation Monetized" and I would need some more info about the Pro paid option you mention. At which URL can I find such info? Thx!
One idea that might save designers a lot of time. The main focus, at least for me, is "most designs were not editable and unrelated to real-world products". Very important feature that i think does make a difference. Adding the fact that you can get a file source to better understand the "why?" and the "how?".
Pretty nice.
Just tried it with the Product Hunt design file - really cool stuff. Seems like it will be very useful in quickly making realistic preliminary wireframes using design patterns and UI elements pulled from other popular apps.
I can see myself Frankenstein-ing an app design using components from many different popular apps. Ex: "I want an app that has a home page feed like Product Hunt with posts like Instagram but text editing like Notion and comment threads like Twitter" and being able to quickly pull - and adjust - those components to mesh together.
Gonna keep playing with the free version for now but looks good so far!
This is a great app to quickly get started with the design process which tends to be a little tricky for developers who are more focused on coding aspect of project instead of designing.