[AI] Stitch review
While studying AI, I even searched for design AI, and I used it because it was called Design AI called Stitch.
Step 1
I'm trying to work as a developer again in my 40s PM, and I'm trying to blog my development history. Can you help me design a blog? I'm writing a blog in Korean and English with a feeling of Europe or North America.
As I wrote this, the design I recommended is as follows.
It was neater than the senggak, with a professional feel. It was nice to see the design in the form of a pigma.

I showed you my blog, asked you for design recommendations, do you want me to do it in dark mode? I asked him to make it for me.

It felt like this... So this time in chatGPT, I asked for a design comparison analysis with my existing blog 1 and 2.
Consequences of GPT
| Category | Number 1 (Now) | Number 2 (White) | Number 3 (Dark) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Blog | Portfolio | Brand Site |
| Emotions | Growth | Completion | Choreography |
| Immersion | Post-focused | Career-focused | Design-focused |
| Corresponds to you | ✅ | ❌ | ⚠️ |
👉 Replace with 2/3:
Rather Likely to Disorient
Actually, this was my heart.
2,3 It wasn't the direction I wanted AI to take.
As expected, GPT reads my mind...
GPT Recommended Designs
Hold ✅ 1 + Get part of 3
1. Grow Your Typo
It's still good now,
👉 Main phrase louder (overwhelmed)
2. Upgrade your card design
→ Slightly mediocre card now
Replace 👉 it with:
glow on hover
make border subtle
Background Darker
3. Increase the margins (this is key)
European feel = margins
👉 1.3-1.5 times more than now
4. Accent color unification
Now:
Green + Blue Blend
👉 Recommended:
Unified as one turquoise (# 00FFC6 series)
5. About page can be styled 3 times
👉 This is a real key tip
Home = Style Now (Blog)
About = feels like an advanced portfolio
→ This combination is the strongest
Conclusion
Stitch is made well, but it still seems to be too formalized design.
In the end, it seems right to use multiple AIs to double-check and develop them.
There is no AI that is the correct answer...
backtodev
A 40-something PM returns to code. Learning, failing, and growing.