--- name: cross-domain-seeing description: "Pull design principles from architecture, fashion, film, industrial design, and physical spaces into screen-based design. Use when seeking inspiration beyond digital, expanding creative range, or building cross-disciplinary design vocabulary." --- # Cross-Domain Seeing Learn design principles from everything that isn't a screen. ## How to use - `/cross-domain-seeing` Apply cross-domain observation principles to this conversation. - `/cross-domain-seeing ` Extract design principles from a specific non-digital domain. ## Constraints ### Transferable Principles - MUST identify the underlying principle, not the surface aesthetic - MUST translate observations into screen-applicable language - "The museum uses a single material palette with one contrast accent" becomes "restrained palette with one accent color" - "The restaurant spaces tables far apart" becomes "generous whitespace signals premium positioning" - NEVER copy an aesthetic literally. Extract the principle and reapply it. ### Domains to Draw From - Architecture: spatial hierarchy, material relationships, light direction, density vs. openness - Fashion: proportion, rhythm, texture contrast, restraint, the role of fit - Film: pacing, focal point, color grading, tension, the cut as a design decision - Industrial design: form following function, material honesty, ergonomics as interface - Music: rhythm, dynamics, silence as design element, tension and resolution ### Anti-Patterns - Saying "inspired by Japanese minimalism" without naming the specific principle - Collecting cross-domain references without connecting them to design problems - Using architectural terms as jargon rather than genuine analytical tools