The reality behind responsive design: Does more responsive mean less design?

A few times lately, I’ve heard people on the radio talk refer to blog comments and other discussions that responsive sites tend to look alike.

Since folks also tend to think WP sites look alike, that means responsive WP sites would be operating in an even thinner band of visual variation.

I don’t think either accusation is true. Or, more accurately, they don’t have to be true.

But the fact is that whether or not there’s some similarity between sites on small screens, having at least a phone-size version is no longer optional.

So how do we keep responsive WP sites from looking like each other? And where does mobile-first fit into all of this?

What are the obstacles?

The obvious approaches?

Let’s look at the ideal case, the bare-bones case and a middle ground – and some tools we can use to get started.

About marybaum

2022 Core representative and co-maintainer of a few components. Copy editor for the Core team (I may have tweaked that error message you saw yesterday!) WordCamp speaker, mostly on design and CSS. Direct marketer with a design degree in three things: 1. Don't make it symmetrical. 2. Do make it look intentional. 3. And if you can’t make it good, make it big. Self-taught developer, if you don’t count CSS-Tricks, Know the Code Pro and Wes Bos. Dabbler in online fabric and assorted other product design, and 3D. Tennis, landscape and macro photographer and near-daily tennis player. Grandmother.