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10 Design Tips for the Non-Designer

  • Writer: Paige Hinton
    Paige Hinton
  • May 16
  • 2 min read

Because good design isn’t just for designers.


Let’s be honest—design can feel intimidating. You open Canva or PowerPoint with the best intentions and end up 30 minutes deep, paralyzed by font choices and color palettes. Sound familiar?


The good news? You don’t need to be a professional designer to create clean, effective visuals. You just need a few core principles to help you avoid the most common pitfalls.


Here are 10 practical design tips anyone can follow, no design degree required.



1. Keep It Simple

Don’t overcrowd your layout. White space is your friend. A clear, focused design is almost always more effective than a busy one.

  • Do: Use one focal point per design. Don’t: Try to cram everything into one image or slide.


2. Choose One or Two Fonts—Max

Too many fonts can make your design look chaotic. Stick with a strong pairing: one for headlines, one for body text.


  • Try combinations like Montserrat + Open Sans or Playfair Display + Lato for balance and clarity.


3. Use Consistent Alignment

Avoid randomly placing text or images. Align elements to the same edge (left, center, or right) for a more polished and professional look.

  • Pro tip: Use alignment tools in Canva, Figma, or PowerPoint to snap items into place.


4. Master the Art of Contrast

Contrast helps guide the viewer's eye. Use size, colour, and weight (bold vs. regular) to create visual hierarchy.

  • Example: Make your headline bold and large. Keep supporting text smaller and lighter.


5. Limit Your Color Palette

Stick to 2–3 main colours. Too many colours can be visually overwhelming and hard to balance.

  • Use tools like Coolors or Adobe Colour to generate palettes, or use your brand colours consistently.


6. Don’t Stretch or Squish Images

This is one of the most common non-designer mistakes. Always maintain your image's aspect ratio—hold Shift when resizing in most apps.

  • Bonus tip: Use high-resolution images to avoid pixelation.


7. Use Icons and Visuals to Support Text

Break up heavy text with icons, images, or illustrations. This makes content more digestible and engaging.


8. Stick to a Grid

Grids help structure your layout and make designs look more balanced. Most design tools have built-in grid features—use them!

  • Even spacing between elements = cleaner design.


9. Be Intentional with Text Hierarchy

Use different font sizes or weights to distinguish between headings, subheadings, and body text. This helps guide the viewer’s attention.

  • Example: Headline (24pt, bold) Subheading (18pt, regular) Body Text (14pt, light)


10. Proofread Everything

A beautiful design won’t save you from a typo. Always double-check spelling, grammar, and layout before publishing or printing.

  • Reading aloud or having a second pair of eyes can make all the difference.


Final Thoughts


You don’t need to be a trained designer to create content that looks great—you just need to understand a few core principles and apply them consistently.

Whether you're building a social post, pitch deck, or flyer, these tips will help your work stand out for the right reasons.

 
 
 
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