polish
pbakaus/impeccable
Final quality pass fixing alignment, spacing, consistency, and micro-details before shipping.
What is polish?
Performs a meticulous review to catch visual inconsistencies, spacing issues, interaction states, and micro-interactions that separate good work from great work. Use when the user mentions polish, finishing touches, pre-launch review, or wants to elevate quality before shipping.
- Discovers and aligns with existing design systems and conventions
- Validates visual alignment, spacing, and typography consistency across all breakpoints
- Ensures all interactive elements have complete state coverage (default, hover, focus, active, disabled, loading, error, success)
- Implements smooth micro-interactions and transitions with appropriate easing
- Audits content consistency, copy quality, icons, forms, and error/loading/empty states
- Checks accessibility compliance (contrast ratios, keyboard navigation, ARIA labels, focus indicators)
How to install polish
npx skills add https://github.com/pbakaus/impeccable --skill polish- Functional completeness—the feature must be feature-complete before polishing
- Access to design system documentation, component libraries, or style guides if they exist
- Understanding of the quality bar (MVP vs flagship feature) and timeline
How to use polish
- 1.Run /impeccable teach if no design context exists, then follow the Context Gathering Protocol
- 2.Discover the design system: locate design tokens, component libraries, spacing scales, and established conventions
- 3.Perform pre-polish assessment: confirm functional completeness, identify quality bar, and note known issues to preserve
- 4.Work systematically through polish dimensions: visual alignment, typography, color/contrast, interaction states, micro-interactions, copy, icons, forms, edge cases, responsiveness, performance, and code quality
- 5.Use the provided checklist to verify all polish areas are addressed before shipping
Use cases
- Preparing a feature for production launch with a final quality review
- Aligning a new component with an existing design system to eliminate drift
- Ensuring all interaction states are implemented and smooth before user testing
- Auditing a completed feature for visual inconsistencies and micro-detail gaps
- Validating responsive design and touch targets across mobile, tablet, and desktop
- Frontend engineers and designers finalizing features
- Product teams preparing for launch or user testing
- Developers working with established design systems
- Teams aiming for high-quality, polished user experiences
polish FAQ
Polish is the final step after a feature is functionally complete. Use it when the user mentions finishing touches, pre-launch review, something looks off, or wants to go from good to great. Do not polish incomplete work.
Polish against the conventions visible in the codebase. Look for patterns in spacing, color usage, typography, and component structure, then ensure the target feature follows those same patterns.
Every interactive element needs all states: default, hover, focus, active, disabled, loading, error, and success. Missing states create confusion. Implement all of them systematically.
Use ease-out-quart, ease-out-quint, or ease-out-expo for natural deceleration. Avoid bounce or elastic easing—they feel dated. Keep transitions in the 150-300ms range.
Enable a grid overlay in your browser or design tool and verify elements snap to grid. Use the browser inspector to check spacing values. Test at multiple viewport sizes to ensure consistency across breakpoints.
Full instructions (SKILL.md)
Source of truth, from pbakaus/impeccable.
name: polish description: Performs a final quality pass fixing alignment, spacing, consistency, and micro-detail issues before shipping. Use when the user mentions polish, finishing touches, pre-launch review, something looks off, or wants to go from good to great. version: 2.1.1 user-invocable: true argument-hint: "[target]"
MANDATORY PREPARATION
Invoke /impeccable — 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 /impeccable teach first. Additionally gather: quality bar (MVP vs flagship).
Perform a meticulous final pass to catch all the small details that separate good work from great work. The difference between shipped and polished.
Design System Discovery
Before polishing, understand the system you are polishing toward:
- Find the design system: Search for design system documentation, component libraries, style guides, or token definitions. Study the core patterns: color tokens, spacing scale, typography styles, component API.
- Note the conventions: How are shared components imported? What spacing scale is used? Which colors come from tokens vs hard-coded values? What motion and interaction patterns are established?
- Identify drift: Where does the target feature deviate from the system? Hard-coded values that should be tokens, custom components that duplicate shared ones, spacing that doesn't match the scale.
If a design system exists, polish should align the feature with it. If none exists, polish against the conventions visible in the codebase.
Pre-Polish Assessment
Understand the current state and goals:
-
Review completeness:
- Is it functionally complete?
- Are there known issues to preserve (mark with TODOs)?
- What's the quality bar? (MVP vs flagship feature?)
- When does it ship? (How much time for polish?)
-
Identify polish areas:
- Visual inconsistencies
- Spacing and alignment issues
- Interaction state gaps
- Copy inconsistencies
- Edge cases and error states
- Loading and transition smoothness
CRITICAL: Polish is the last step, not the first. Don't polish work that's not functionally complete.
Polish Systematically
Work through these dimensions methodically:
Visual Alignment & Spacing
- Pixel-perfect alignment: Everything lines up to grid
- Consistent spacing: All gaps use spacing scale (no random 13px gaps)
- Optical alignment: Adjust for visual weight (icons may need offset for optical centering)
- Responsive consistency: Spacing and alignment work at all breakpoints
- Grid adherence: Elements snap to baseline grid
Check:
- Enable grid overlay and verify alignment
- Check spacing with browser inspector
- Test at multiple viewport sizes
- Look for elements that "feel" off
Typography Refinement
- Hierarchy consistency: Same elements use same sizes/weights throughout
- Line length: 45-75 characters for body text
- Line height: Appropriate for font size and context
- Widows & orphans: No single words on last line
- Hyphenation: Appropriate for language and column width
- Kerning: Adjust letter spacing where needed (especially headlines)
- Font loading: No FOUT/FOIT flashes
Color & Contrast
- Contrast ratios: All text meets WCAG standards
- Consistent token usage: No hard-coded colors, all use design tokens
- Theme consistency: Works in all theme variants
- Color meaning: Same colors mean same things throughout
- Accessible focus: Focus indicators visible with sufficient contrast
- Tinted neutrals: No pure gray or pure black—add subtle color tint (0.01 chroma)
- Gray on color: Never put gray text on colored backgrounds—use a shade of that color or transparency
Interaction States
Every interactive element needs all states:
- Default: Resting state
- Hover: Subtle feedback (color, scale, shadow)
- Focus: Keyboard focus indicator (never remove without replacement)
- Active: Click/tap feedback
- Disabled: Clearly non-interactive
- Loading: Async action feedback
- Error: Validation or error state
- Success: Successful completion
Missing states create confusion and broken experiences.
Micro-interactions & Transitions
- Smooth transitions: All state changes animated appropriately (150-300ms)
- Consistent easing: Use ease-out-quart/quint/expo for natural deceleration. Never bounce or elastic—they feel dated.
- No jank: 60fps animations, only animate transform and opacity
- Appropriate motion: Motion serves purpose, not decoration
- Reduced motion: Respects
prefers-reduced-motion
Content & Copy
- Consistent terminology: Same things called same names throughout
- Consistent capitalization: Title Case vs Sentence case applied consistently
- Grammar & spelling: No typos
- Appropriate length: Not too wordy, not too terse
- Punctuation consistency: Periods on sentences, not on labels (unless all labels have them)
Icons & Images
- Consistent style: All icons from same family or matching style
- Appropriate sizing: Icons sized consistently for context
- Proper alignment: Icons align with adjacent text optically
- Alt text: All images have descriptive alt text
- Loading states: Images don't cause layout shift, proper aspect ratios
- Retina support: 2x assets for high-DPI screens
Forms & Inputs
- Label consistency: All inputs properly labeled
- Required indicators: Clear and consistent
- Error messages: Helpful and consistent
- Tab order: Logical keyboard navigation
- Auto-focus: Appropriate (don't overuse)
- Validation timing: Consistent (on blur vs on submit)
Edge Cases & Error States
- Loading states: All async actions have loading feedback
- Empty states: Helpful empty states, not just blank space
- Error states: Clear error messages with recovery paths
- Success states: Confirmation of successful actions
- Long content: Handles very long names, descriptions, etc.
- No content: Handles missing data gracefully
- Offline: Appropriate offline handling (if applicable)
Responsiveness
- All breakpoints: Test mobile, tablet, desktop
- Touch targets: 44x44px minimum on touch devices
- Readable text: No text smaller than 14px on mobile
- No horizontal scroll: Content fits viewport
- Appropriate reflow: Content adapts logically
Performance
- Fast initial load: Optimize critical path
- No layout shift: Elements don't jump after load (CLS)
- Smooth interactions: No lag or jank
- Optimized images: Appropriate formats and sizes
- Lazy loading: Off-screen content loads lazily
Code Quality
- Remove console logs: No debug logging in production
- Remove commented code: Clean up dead code
- Remove unused imports: Clean up unused dependencies
- Consistent naming: Variables and functions follow conventions
- Type safety: No TypeScript
anyor ignored errors - Accessibility: Proper ARIA labels and semantic HTML
Polish Checklist
Go through systematically:
- Visual alignment perfect at all breakpoints
- Spacing uses design tokens consistently
- Typography hierarchy consistent
- All interactive states implemented
- All transitions smooth (60fps)
- Copy is consistent and polished
- Icons are consistent and properly sized
- All forms properly labeled and validated
- Error states are helpful
- Loading states are clear
- Empty states are welcoming
- Touch targets are 44x44px minimum
- Contrast ratios meet WCAG AA
- Keyboard navigation works
- Focus indicators visible
- No console errors or warnings
- No layout shift on load
- Works in all supported browsers
- Respects reduced motion preference
- Code is clean (no TODOs, console.logs, commented code)
IMPORTANT: Polish is about details. Zoom in. Squint at it. Use it yourself. The little things add up.
NEVER:
- Polish before it's functionally complete
- Spend hours on polish if it ships in 30 minutes (triage)
- Introduce bugs while polishing (test thoroughly)
- Ignore systematic issues (if spacing is off everywhere, fix the system)
- Perfect one thing while leaving others rough (consistent quality level)
- Create new one-off components when design system equivalents exist
- Hard-code values that should use design tokens
Final Verification
Before marking as done:
- Use it yourself: Actually interact with the feature
- Test on real devices: Not just browser DevTools
- Ask someone else to review: Fresh eyes catch things
- Compare to design: Match intended design
- Check all states: Don't just test happy path
Clean Up
After polishing, ensure code quality:
- Replace custom implementations: If the design system provides a component you reimplemented, switch to the shared version.
- Remove orphaned code: Delete unused styles, components, or files made obsolete by polish.
- Consolidate tokens: If you introduced new values, check whether they should be tokens.
- Verify DRYness: Look for duplication introduced during polishing and consolidate.
Remember: You have impeccable attention to detail and exquisite taste. Polish until it feels effortless, looks intentional, and works flawlessly. Sweat the details - they matter.
Related skills
More from pbakaus/impeccable and the wider catalog.
impeccable
Design and iterate production-grade frontend interfaces with real working code and exceptional craft.
critique
Evaluate design from a UX perspective with quantitative scoring, persona testing, and automated anti-pattern detection.
audit
Run technical quality checks across accessibility, performance, theming, responsive design, and anti-patterns with severity ratings.
animate
Review features and add purposeful animations, micro-interactions, and motion effects that improve usability and delight.
adapt
Adapt designs across screen sizes, devices, and platforms with responsive layouts and context-aware patterns.
clarify
Improve unclear UX copy, error messages, and interface text to make products easier to understand.