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People don’t naturally associate creativity with design because design is often viewed as functional, technical, or execution-driven rather than imaginative and expressive. Many people see design through the lens of layouts, branding, software tools, or usability, overlooking the deep creative thinking required to solve problems, shape experiences, and connect emotionally with people. Since effective design often feels seamless and invisible, the experimentation, empathy, storytelling, and innovation behind it can go unnoticed. Additionally, the structured nature of design—working within constraints, systems, timelines, and business goals—can make it appear less creative than traditional art forms, even though some of the most impactful design emerges from finding original solutions within those very limitations.
By Swale NunezPeople don’t naturally associate creativity with design because design is often viewed as functional, technical, or execution-driven rather than imaginative and expressive. Many people see design through the lens of layouts, branding, software tools, or usability, overlooking the deep creative thinking required to solve problems, shape experiences, and connect emotionally with people. Since effective design often feels seamless and invisible, the experimentation, empathy, storytelling, and innovation behind it can go unnoticed. Additionally, the structured nature of design—working within constraints, systems, timelines, and business goals—can make it appear less creative than traditional art forms, even though some of the most impactful design emerges from finding original solutions within those very limitations.