Skills Design & Creative Monochromatic UI Design Guide

Monochromatic UI Design Guide

v20260619
monochromatic-ui
A comprehensive guide for implementing Monochromatic User Interfaces across Web, iOS, and Android. Learn how to achieve high elegance and strict color discipline by restricting the palette to variations (tints, tones, shades) of a single base hue. Includes detailed CSS, SwiftUI, and Flutter examples, emphasizing accessibility, texture usage, and color theory principles.
Get Skill
272 downloads
Overview

Monochromatic UI

"Elegance through constraint. A single hue, explored through all its tints, tones, and shades."

When to Use

Use this sub-style when the user's request matches the aesthetic described above. This is a child reference of the design-it skill and is not meant to be triggered directly.

Core Principles

  1. Single Hue: Choose one base color (e.g., deep blue). The entire UI is built using lighter (tints) and darker (shades) versions of that exact hue.
  2. High Contrast for Legibility: The darkest shade and the lightest tint must have enough contrast to pass accessibility standards when placed together.
  3. Texture over Color: Since color is restricted, use subtle textures, patterns, or varying opacities to differentiate sections.

Visual DNA

  • Colors: Monochromatic Brown or pick one dominant hue from Earth-Grounded Elegance and extrapolate it.
  • Typography: Clean and unobtrusive. The layout relies heavily on font weights to establish hierarchy since color cannot.
  • Shadows: Shadows must be tinted with the base hue, never pure black.

Web Implementation

  • Use HSL (Hue, Saturation, Lightness) heavily in CSS to make building the palette easy.
  • CSS Example:
:root {
  /* Base Hue: Deep Blue (210) */
  --mono-900: hsl(210, 80%, 10%); /* Very dark */
  --mono-700: hsl(210, 70%, 30%); /* Dark */
  --mono-500: hsl(210, 60%, 50%); /* Base */
  --mono-300: hsl(210, 50%, 80%); /* Light */
  --mono-100: hsl(210, 40%, 95%); /* Very light background */
}

body {
  background-color: var(--mono-100);
  color: var(--mono-900);
  font-family: 'Inter', sans-serif;
}

.mono-card {
  background-color: #ffffff; /* Or mono-100 */
  border: 1px solid var(--mono-300);
  border-radius: 8px;
  padding: 32px;
  /* Tinted shadow */
  box-shadow: 0 10px 25px hsla(210, 80%, 10%, 0.05);
}

.mono-btn {
  background-color: var(--mono-500);
  color: #ffffff;
  border: none;
  border-radius: 4px;
  padding: 12px 24px;
  transition: background-color 0.2s;
}

.mono-btn:hover {
  background-color: var(--mono-700);
}

.mono-subtext {
  color: var(--mono-500); /* Use mid-tones for secondary text */
  font-weight: 500;
}

App Implementation

SwiftUI

struct MonochromaticView: View {
    // Base Hue: Deep Blue (210 in 360-degree HSB/HSL)
    // In SwiftUI, hue is 0.0 to 1.0 (210/360 = 0.58)
    let mono900 = Color(hue: 0.58, saturation: 0.80, brightness: 0.10)
    let mono700 = Color(hue: 0.58, saturation: 0.70, brightness: 0.30)
    let mono500 = Color(hue: 0.58, saturation: 0.60, brightness: 0.50)
    let mono300 = Color(hue: 0.58, saturation: 0.50, brightness: 0.80)
    let mono100 = Color(hue: 0.58, saturation: 0.40, brightness: 0.95)
    
    var body: some View {
        VStack(spacing: 24) {
            // Card
            VStack(alignment: .leading, spacing: 12) {
                Text("Monochromatic Elegance")
                    .font(.title2).fontWeight(.semibold)
                    .foregroundColor(mono900)
                
                Text("Using only variations in saturation and brightness of a single hue.")
                    .foregroundColor(mono500)
            }
            .padding(32)
            .background(Color.white)
            .border(mono300, width: 1)
            .shadow(color: mono900.opacity(0.1), radius: 15, y: 5) // Tinted shadow
            
            // Button
            Button(action: {}) {
                Text("Primary Action")
                    .fontWeight(.bold)
                    .foregroundColor(.white)
                    .frame(maxWidth: .infinity)
                    .padding()
                    .background(mono500)
                    .cornerRadius(8)
            }
        }
        .padding()
        .frame(maxWidth: .infinity, maxHeight: .infinity)
        .background(mono100)
    }
}
  • Define your colors using Color(hue: saturation: brightness:). This ensures math-perfect monochromatic harmony.
  • Always tint your drop shadows with your mono900 color. Pure black shadows look dirty in a strict monochromatic UI.

Flutter

class MonochromaticScreen extends StatelessWidget {
  // Base Hue: Deep Blue (210)
  // Flutter HSVColor uses Hue 0-360, Saturation 0.0-1.0, Value 0.0-1.0
  final Color mono900 = const HSVColor.fromAHSV(1.0, 210, 0.80, 0.10).toColor();
  final Color mono500 = const HSVColor.fromAHSV(1.0, 210, 0.60, 0.50).toColor();
  final Color mono300 = const HSVColor.fromAHSV(1.0, 210, 0.50, 0.80).toColor();
  final Color mono100 = const HSVColor.fromAHSV(1.0, 210, 0.40, 0.95).toColor();

  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return Scaffold(
      backgroundColor: mono100,
      body: Center(
        child: Padding(
          padding: const EdgeInsets.all(24.0),
          child: Column(
            mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.center,
            children: [
              // Card
              Container(
                width: double.infinity,
                padding: const EdgeInsets.all(32),
                decoration: BoxDecoration(
                  color: Colors.white,
                  border: Border.all(color: mono300),
                  borderRadius: BorderRadius.circular(8),
                  boxShadow: [
                    BoxShadow(color: mono900.withOpacity(0.1), blurRadius: 15, offset: const Offset(0, 5))
                  ],
                ),
                child: Column(
                  crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.start,
                  children: [
                    Text('Monochromatic', style: TextStyle(fontSize: 24, fontWeight: FontWeight.w600, color: mono900)),
                    const SizedBox(height: 12),
                    Text('Variations of a single hue.', style: TextStyle(fontSize: 16, color: mono500)),
                  ],
                ),
              ),
              const SizedBox(height: 24),
              // Button
              ElevatedButton(
                onPressed: () {},
                style: ElevatedButton.styleFrom(
                  backgroundColor: mono500,
                  foregroundColor: Colors.white,
                  minimumSize: const Size(double.infinity, 56),
                  shape: RoundedRectangleBorder(borderRadius: BorderRadius.circular(8)),
                  elevation: 0,
                ),
                child: const Text('Primary Action', style: TextStyle(fontWeight: FontWeight.bold)),
              ),
            ],
          ),
        ),
      ),
    );
  }
}
  • Flutter's HSVColor.fromAHSV() is the best way to explicitly code a monochromatic palette without guessing hex codes.

React Native

// Base Hue: Deep Blue (210)
const theme = {
  mono900: 'hsl(210, 80%, 10%)',
  mono700: 'hsl(210, 70%, 30%)',
  mono500: 'hsl(210, 60%, 50%)',
  mono300: 'hsl(210, 50%, 80%)',
  mono100: 'hsl(210, 40%, 95%)',
};

const MonochromaticScreen = () => {
  return (
    <View style={{ flex: 1, backgroundColor: theme.mono100, padding: 24, justifyContent: 'center' }}>
      
      <View style={{
        backgroundColor: '#FFFFFF',
        borderColor: theme.mono300,
        borderWidth: 1,
        borderRadius: 8,
        padding: 32,
        marginBottom: 24,
        // Tinted shadow (iOS)
        shadowColor: theme.mono900, shadowOffset: { width: 0, height: 5 },
        shadowOpacity: 0.1, shadowRadius: 15,
      }}>
        <Text style={{ fontSize: 24, fontWeight: '600', color: theme.mono900, marginBottom: 12 }}>
          Monochromatic
        </Text>
        <Text style={{ fontSize: 16, color: theme.mono500 }}>
          Using HSL strings in React Native makes palette generation trivial.
        </Text>
      </View>

      <TouchableOpacity style={{
        backgroundColor: theme.mono500,
        padding: 16,
        borderRadius: 8,
        alignItems: 'center'
      }}>
        <Text style={{ fontWeight: 'bold', color: '#FFFFFF', fontSize: 16 }}>
          Primary Action
        </Text>
      </TouchableOpacity>
      
    </View>
  );
};
  • React Native's StyleSheet accepts CSS hsl() strings natively. Use them! It makes debugging and tweaking a monochromatic palette a million times easier than using hex codes.

Jetpack Compose

@Composable
fun MonochromaticScreen() {
    // Base Hue: Deep Blue (210)
    // Compose Color.hsv requires Hue 0-360f, Saturation 0-1f, Value 0-1f
    val mono900 = Color.hsv(210f, 0.80f, 0.10f)
    val mono500 = Color.hsv(210f, 0.60f, 0.50f)
    val mono300 = Color.hsv(210f, 0.50f, 0.80f)
    val mono100 = Color.hsv(210f, 0.40f, 0.95f)

    Column(
        modifier = Modifier
            .fillMaxSize()
            .background(mono100)
            .padding(24.dp),
        verticalArrangement = Arrangement.Center
    ) {
        // Card
        Box(
            modifier = Modifier
                .fillMaxWidth()
                .shadow(15.dp, RoundedCornerShape(8.dp), spotColor = mono900.copy(alpha = 0.2f))
                .background(Color.White, RoundedCornerShape(8.dp))
                .border(1.dp, mono300, RoundedCornerShape(8.dp))
                .padding(32.dp)
        ) {
            Column {
                Text("Monochromatic", fontSize = 24.sp, fontWeight = FontWeight.SemiBold, color = mono900)
                Spacer(Modifier.height(12.dp))
                Text("Strictly enforced hue discipline.", color = mono500)
            }
        }
        
        Spacer(Modifier.height(24.dp))
        
        // Button
        Button(
            onClick = { },
            colors = ButtonDefaults.buttonColors(containerColor = mono500, contentColor = Color.White),
            shape = RoundedCornerShape(8.dp),
            modifier = Modifier.fillMaxWidth().height(56.dp)
        ) {
            Text("Primary Action", fontWeight = FontWeight.Bold)
        }
    }
}
  • Use Color.hsv() to define the palette.
  • Set the spotColor in your Modifier.shadow to mono900 to keep the shadows from looking muddy or disjointed from the design system.

Do's and Don'ts

  • DO: Use pure white or pure black as absolute extremes if needed for text legibility.
  • DON'T: Sneak in an accent color. If you add a red error button to a blue monochromatic UI, it immediately breaks the aesthetic and becomes "duotone" or standard UI. Find a way to signify errors using bold text or dark shades of the base hue.

Limitations

  • This is a styling reference and does not replace environment-specific validation, accessibility testing, or expert review.
  • Ensure appropriate contrast ratios and responsive behaviors are verified separately.
Info
Name monochromatic-ui
Version v20260619
Size 10.61KB
Updated At 2026-07-13
Language