“Learn how to create an immersive parallax effect right inside Figma, in less than 15 minutes.”
Learn how to build a dual range slider that is adjustable using Auto Layout so you don’t have to create a ton of variants to show different options.
In this guide, Bruno Temporim Carneiro shares a method for structuring Figma components through nesting and organizing variants. This approach allows for easy modification and updates to components.
Tutorial from Samarth Jajodia on creating a cool animation with a few shapes, gradients, and blend modes with Smart Animate.
Cool technique from Nitish Khagwal for creating animated liquid mesh gradients.
How I create liquid mesh gradients in @figma without any plugins, a thread 🧵... pic.twitter.com/5Vhm02h0FP
— Nitish Khagwal ✨ (@nitishkmrk) May 3, 2023
A simple but fun technique for creating cool animations with mirrored components.
Random silly Monday fun in @figma with mirrored components pic.twitter.com/jfFRgvzCFN
— Double Glitch 🇺🇦 (@double__glitch) May 1, 2023
A quick demo of the sticky scroll feature introduced as part of the recent Little Big Updates.
Lauren shows how to create a micro animation (also known as micro interaction) using a heart icon. These interactions add a really fun touch, and I love that the tutorial uses a heart icon from another tutorial by Miggi.
Lauren Andres discovers an older feature “delete and heal” to create smoother vector lines.
Fons Mans is back with a new tutorial on how to create a glowing glass effect in Figma.
Tutorial Thread ✨
— Fons Mans (@FonsMans) April 28, 2023
Learn how to create a glowing glass effect with @figma, in just a few easy steps — no plugins needed!
Ready? Let’s dive in 👇#sponsored pic.twitter.com/6NNqVmrYfa
Hold the Spacebar when moving an object to ignore Auto Layout.
🧙♀️ 11 second tip 🧙♀️
— Helena (@minor_axis) December 9, 2021
Ignore auto layout in Figma by pressing space bar as you drag an object. pic.twitter.com/fjUe8gcAAz
A good tip from Jan Toman on color-coding different types of components inside a Figma library, which allows everyone to identify the component’s source and set the right expectations from these components.
When using @figma libraries, we found color-coding different types of components extremely helpful.
— Jan Toman (@HonzaTmn) April 25, 2023
This allows everyone in the team to identify the component's source quickly and set the right expectations from these components.
Some tips and learnings in the thread 🧵 pic.twitter.com/FMr7kjSVBv
MDS with a great shortcut of double-clicking on a layer icon to zoom into selection.
TIL double clicking layer icons in @figma zooms to selection. pic.twitter.com/hvNs0l4BEr
— MDS (@mds) April 26, 2023
On a similar note, this thread by Luis is a great walkthrough of debugging, reducing complexity, and refactoring a tricky variant component. The core part of his approach is slicing everything up into composable parts.
Last week I was asked by someone in the Figma community to help debug and refactor their variant component
— luis. (@disco_lu) April 25, 2023
So I'm going to try and walk through how I did it! Let's see if it works as 1 million tweets 🐦
The short answer is: components everywhere pic.twitter.com/DKgjC5oNWg
Joe Bernstein on confronting the conflict between what’s possible in Figma and what’s practical: “Ultimately, my point here is that I over-engineered this component. Figma has the capacity to be much more than a design tool, and sometimes I use it to engineer a UI. Clearly I enjoy doing that, and I even get lost in the weeds to achieve a deeply technical solution. But design systems and asset libraries are just as much a user-centered design problem as any other publicly facing product.”
With the Walkthrough widget, you can give your stakeholders an interactive tour with smooth animations without being there yourself. You can use it to introduce file content or explain a complex flow.
What, an old-school plugin without AI? 🤯 “Dithercore creates cool dithered images reminiscent of ’80s and ’90s computer graphics. It brings back the primitive technology of early PCs by utilizing pixel patterns and color schemes from that era.“
Effortlessly remove backgrounds or isolate objects using AI.
I see this tip on exporting the original image file from the Inspect panel shared from time to time, and it always surprises people. Wish it wasn’t so hard to discover!