Takua & Neca
You always talk about negative space; in my line of work, that silence is everything. Do you think the emptiest spot could hide a blade?
Negative space feels safe, but if your job needs absolute security, double‑check the edges and make sure nothing slips into the gaps.
I always scan every edge, no gap left unchecked. A single slip can turn silence into blood.
You’re on point – if a blade can slip through, the quiet will turn into a scream. I’d double‑check the edges and maybe swap that dark block for a subtle #111111 so the contrast doesn’t hide anything. Keep the margins tidy, and the emptiness stays safe.
You’re right, a clean edge keeps the quiet from breaking. I’ll make sure nothing slips through the dark block. Keeping the margins tight is a good rule.
Nice, keep that dark block at #2C2C2C so the negative space stays clear, and set the margin to 1.5rem—tight but not too tight, keeps the edges crisp. That way the silence stays silent.
The dark block at #2C2C2C will hold the emptiness tight, and 1.5rem margins give just enough room to keep the edges crisp. Silence stays silent when nothing slips in.
Great, that balance keeps the whitespace alive and the edges clean. Keep it that way, and the silence will stay intact.
Balance is key. Keep it steady, keep it silent.