graphic-layout

Graphic Layout (图文排版)

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Install skill "graphic-layout" with this command: npx skills add vivy-yi/xiaohongshu-skills/vivy-yi-xiaohongshu-skills-graphic-layout

Graphic Layout (图文排版)

Overview

Graphic layout is the strategic arrangement of visual elements, typography, colors, and spacing in Xiaohongshu posts to create aesthetically pleasing, readable, and engaging content that captures attention within milliseconds, communicates messages clearly, and reinforces brand identity through proven design principles. In Xiaohongshu's visually-first environment, professional layout isn't optional - it's the difference between 50 views and 50,000 views. Great design makes content scannable, shareable, and memorable, while poor layout makes even valuable content invisible.

Key insight: Research shows users form first impressions of visual content in 50 milliseconds. Professional graphic layout improves engagement by 40%, increases save rates by 2x (people save well-designed content for reference), and strengthens brand recognition through consistent visual identity. Design is not decoration - it's communication.

When to Use

Use when:

  • Creating graphic-heavy posts with text overlays (quotes, tips, statistics)

  • Designing carousel slides with multiple elements per slide

  • Formatting infographic content to convey information visually

  • Creating promotional graphics (sales, announcements, launches)

  • Designing educational visuals (tutorials, how-tos, explanations)

  • Producing quote graphics or inspirational text posts

  • Creating branded content templates for consistent visual identity

  • Combining photos with text, icons, or decorative elements

  • Designing before/after comparison graphics

  • Creating listicles or numbered content in visual format

Do NOT use when:

  • Sharing raw, unedited photos (let image stand alone)

  • Content is text-heavy and better as pure text post

  • Minimal design is intentional aesthetic choice (artistic direction)

  • Quick, behind-the-scenes content where polish feels inauthentic

  • Video-first content where graphics are secondary

Core Pattern

Before (poor layout): ❌ "Cluttered, chaotic, no visual hierarchy" ❌ "Hard to read, text competes with background" ❌ "Inconsistent fonts, colors, styles" ❌ "Looks amateur, low credibility" ❌ "Viewers scroll past in <1 second"

After (professional layout): ✅ "Clean, organized, clear visual flow" ✅ "Scannable hierarchy, easy to read" ✅ "Consistent branding, polished aesthetic" ✅ "Professional, trustworthy, shareable" ✅ "Viewers stop, engage, save, share"

6 Essential Layout Principles:

Principle Purpose Impact Priority

Visual Hierarchy Guide eye through content Critical #1 - most important

White Space Prevent clutter, improve readability High #2 - breathing room

Alignment Create order, professionalism High #3 - organized feel

Contrast Emphasize key elements Medium-High #4 - focal points

Consistency Build brand recognition Medium-High #5 - identity

Color Harmony Evoke emotion, aesthetic appeal Medium #6 - atmosphere

Quick Reference

Design Tools Comparison:

Tool Skill Level Cost Best For Platform

Canva Beginner Free/Paid Templates, quick designs Web/Mobile

Figma Intermediate Free/Paid Collaborative, precise design Web/Mac/Win

Adobe Express Beginner Free/Paid Adobe ecosystem integration Web/Mobile

Photoshop Advanced Paid Professional manipulation Desktop

PicMonkey Beginner Paid Photo editing + graphics Web

VistaCreate Beginner Free/Paid Brand kit templates Web

Crello (now VistaCreate) Beginner Free/Paid Social media graphics Web

DesignBold Beginner Paid AI-powered suggestions Web

Xiaohongshu Image Specifications:

  • Aspect Ratio: 4:5 (recommended), 1:1 (square)

  • Resolution: Minimum 1080×1350 (4:5) or 1080×1080 (1:1)

  • File Size: Under 5MB for uploads

  • Format: JPG or PNG

Typography Scale for Readability:

Element Relative Size Use Case

Headline 48-64pt Main title, hook

Subheadline 32-40pt Supporting points, sections

Body Text 20-28pt Main content, details

Captions/Labels 16-20pt Image labels, annotations

Color Psychology for Social Media:

Color Emotion Use Cases

Red Energy, urgency Sales, announcements, CTAs

Orange Enthusiasm, warmth Tips, motivational content

Yellow Optimism, attention Highlights, warnings

Green Growth, health Wellness, finance, success

Blue Trust, calm Business, education, professional

Purple Creativity, luxury Art, beauty, premium

Pink Playful, romantic Lifestyle, beauty, feminine

Black/White Sophisticated, minimal Fashion, design, editorial

Implementation

Step 1: Establish Visual Hierarchy

Visual hierarchy guides the viewer's eye through content in order of importance. Without hierarchy, all elements compete equally and nothing stands out.

Hierarchy Techniques (in order of effectiveness):

  1. Size Contrast:
  • Largest element = most important (headline, main point)

  • Medium elements = supporting information

  • Smallest elements = secondary details, credits

  • Rule: Make most important element 2-3x larger than secondary elements

  1. Position Placement:
  • Top/left: Gets attention first (especially for left-to-right readers)

  • Center: High impact, focal point

  • Bottom/right: Supporting information, CTAs

  1. Color Weight:
  • Bright, warm colors (red, orange) = high attention

  • Cool, muted colors (blue, gray) = secondary

  • High contrast = emphasized, low contrast = de-emphasized

  1. Typography Weight:
  • Bold/heavy fonts = headlines, emphasis

  • Regular/medium = body text

  • Light/thin = decorative, minimal elements

Creating Hierarchy Example:

Title (LARGEST, boldest, brightest color) ├─ Subtitle (Medium size, bold but not headline) │ ├─ Point 1 (Body text size, regular weight) │ ├─ Point 2 (Body text size, regular weight) │ └─ Point 3 (Body text size, regular weight) └─ CTA (Small but high contrast color)

Testing Your Hierarchy:

  • Squint at your design (blur vision)

  • Can you still identify the main element? If yes, hierarchy works

  • If everything blends together, strengthen size/color contrast

Step 2: Master White Space (Negative Space)

White space is the absence of content - and it's as important as the content itself. It prevents visual clutter, improves readability, and creates a premium, polished feel.

Types of White Space:

Type Purpose Example

Micro space Between letters, words Line height, letter spacing

Macro space Between elements, sections Margins, padding, gaps

White Space Best Practices:

Margins and Padding:

  • Edge margins: Leave 5-10% of image width as border

  • Text padding: Minimum 20-30px space between text and image edge

  • Element spacing: 30-50px between distinct sections or elements

  • Line spacing: 1.4-1.6x font size for body text readability

The "Breathing Room" Rule:

  • Each major element needs surrounding space equal to 30-50% of its size

  • Don't crowd text against images, icons, or decorative elements

  • If design feels cramped, increase spacing rather than reducing content

Common White Space Mistakes:

  • ❌ Text touching edges (looks amateur, hard to read on mobile)

  • ❌ Elements packed tightly (feels claustrophobic, stressful)

  • ❌ No gap between text and background image (unreadable)

  • ✅ Generous margins, balanced spacing, uncluttered feel

Step 3: Alignment and Grid Systems

Alignment creates invisible lines that connect elements, making design feel organized and professional.

Alignment Options:

Alignment Use Case Effect

Left Body text, paragraphs Easiest to read, natural

Center Headlines, quotes, short text Formal, focused, elegant

Right Captions, credits Unconventional, artistic

Justified Multi-line text Clean edges but can create uneven spacing

Grid System Basics:

2-Column Grid (simple, versatile):

[ Text ] [ Image ] [ Image ] [ Text ]

3-Column Grid (more complex):

[ Text ] [ Image ] [ Text ]

Rule of Thirds (classic composition):

  • Divide image into 3×3 grid (9 equal rectangles)

  • Place key elements at intersections or along lines

  • Creates visual interest and dynamic balance

Alignment Best Practices:

  • One dominant alignment: Choose left, center, or right and stick to it

  • Align related elements: Connect related items with invisible alignment lines

  • Edge alignment: Align text or shapes to a consistent edge (left margin, bottom edge)

  • Center alignment exception: Use only for short text, headlines, quotes

Step 4: Typography and Font Selection

Fonts communicate personality and affect readability. Choose strategically.

Font Categories:

Category Character Best For Examples

Serif Traditional, elegant, trustworthy Long-form, editorial, luxury Times New Roman, Georgia, Playfair Display

Sans-Serif Modern, clean, friendly Headlines, social media, tech Arial, Helvetica, Montserrat

Script Elegant, personal, feminine Quotes, accents, decorative Brush Script, Allura

Display Bold, expressive, unique Headlines, short text Impact, Cooper Black

Font Pairing Combinations (that work):

Headline Font Body Font Effect

Bold Sans-Serif (Montserrat Bold) Regular Sans-Serif (Open Sans) Modern, clean, professional

Elegant Serif (Playfair Display) Clean Sans-Serif (Lato) Sophisticated, editorial

Script (Great Vibes) Simple Sans-Serif (Montserrat) Personal, warm, lifestyle

Display (Impact) Readable Sans-Serif (Roboto) Bold, attention-grabbing

Typography Rules:

  • Limit fonts: Maximum 2-3 fonts per design (1 headline, 1 body, optional accent)

  • Size hierarchy: Headline 2-3x larger than body text

  • Weight contrast: Bold headlines, regular body text

  • Readable size: Body text minimum 20pt for social media

  • Line length: 40-60 characters per line for optimal readability

Chinese Typography (for Xiaohongshu):

  • Headline: 思源黑体, 微软雅黑, 苹方

  • Body: 思源宋体, 冬青黑体, 兰亭黑

  • Avoid: Overly decorative fonts that sacrifice readability

Step 5: Color Strategy and Branding

Color isn't just aesthetic - it's emotional communication and brand identity.

Building Your Brand Color Palette:

Step 1: Choose Primary Color (1-2 colors):

  • Represents your brand personality

  • Used for headlines, CTAs, key elements

  • Examples: Red (Coca-Cola), Blue (Facebook), Green (Spotify)

Step 2: Add Secondary Colors (2-3 colors):

  • Complement primary, add variety

  • Used for supporting elements, backgrounds

  • Should harmonize with primary (color theory)

Step 3: Include Neutrals (3-4 colors):

  • Black, white, gray, beige

  • Used for backgrounds, body text, borders

  • Provide balance and prevent color overwhelm

Color Harmony Formulas:

Harmony Structure Mood Example

Monochromatic One color, varied shades Cohesive, calm Dark blue, medium blue, light blue

Analogous Adjacent colors on wheel Harmonious, comfortable Blue, blue-green, green

Complementary Opposite colors Dynamic, high contrast Blue + orange, red + green

Triadic 3 equally spaced colors Vibrant, balanced Red, yellow, blue

60-30-10 Rule 60% neutral, 30% secondary, 10% accent Balanced, professional 60% white/gray, 30% blue, 10% yellow

Contrast for Readability:

  • Text on background: Minimum 4.5:1 contrast ratio (WCAG standard)

  • Light background + dark text: White background, black text (highest readability)

  • Dark background + light text: Dark blue background, white text

  • Avoid: Red text on green, blue on black (accessibility issues)

Step 6: Layout Templates and Patterns

Don't reinvent the wheel - use proven layout patterns.

Common Xiaohongshu Layout Patterns:

Pattern 1: Typography-Heavy (Quote, Tip)

[White/Light Background] [Headline Text - Centered, Large] [Supporting Text - Smaller] [Icon or Decorative Element] [Branding/Footer - Small, Bottom]

Pattern 2: Split Image + Text

[Image - Left 50%] [Text - Right 50%]

Pattern 3: Full Image + Text Overlay

[Full-Size Background Image] [Semi-transparent Overlay Box] [Headline Text - On Overlay] [Supporting Text - On Overlay]

Pattern 4: Grid/Multi-Image

[Image 1] [Image 2] [Image 3] [Image 4] [Text Footer]

Pattern 5: Listicle (Numbered Points)

[Headline - Top]

  1. [Point 1] [Icon]
  2. [Point 2] [Icon]
  3. [Point 3] [Icon]

Template Creation Workflow:

  • Choose 2-3 layout patterns that fit your content type

  • Create reusable templates in Canva/Figma with your brand colors, fonts

  • Save as templates for consistent, rapid content creation

  • Customize images and text for each post while maintaining structure

Step 7: Mobile Optimization

90%+ of Xiaohongshu users view on mobile - design for small screens first.

Mobile Design Checklist:

  • Text size: Minimum 20pt body text for readability without zoom

  • Touch targets: Buttons/CTAs minimum 44×44px (finger-friendly)

  • Simplified layout: Reduce elements, avoid overcrowding

  • Vertical orientation: Design for portrait mode (9:16 aspect)

  • Test on actual phone: View design on real device, not just desktop

Mobile-Specific Issues:

  • Text too small: Unreadable, users scroll past

  • Too much text: Overwhelming, screen cluttered

  • Horizontal layout: Forces phone rotation, poor UX

  • Low contrast: Hard to read in outdoor/bright light

Mobile-First Design Process:

  • Sketch layout for mobile screen size first

  • Test readability on phone (hold at arm's length)

  • Simplify: Remove non-essential elements

  • Scale up for desktop/tablet (not vice versa)

Common Mistakes

Mistake Why It's Wrong Fix

Too many fonts (3+) Cluttered, unprofessional, hard to read Limit to 2 fonts max (headline + body)

Insufficient contrast Unreadable, especially for accessibility Use high contrast (dark on light, light on dark)

Crowding elements Claustrophobic, amateur, low-quality feel Add white space, margins, breathing room

No visual hierarchy Eye doesn't know where to look first Use size, color, position to emphasize main element

Text touching edges Unprofessional, hard to read (mobile) Leave 5-10% margins around edges

Inconsistent alignment Disorganized, messy feel Choose one alignment (left/center) and stick to it

Poor color choices Unappealing, brand-damaging Use color theory, limit palette to 3-5 colors

Over-designed Style over substance, distracts from content Design supports content, doesn't compete

Ignoring mobile 90% of users can't read comfortably Design mobile-first, test on phone

Low-quality images Pixelated, unprofessional, damages credibility Use high-resolution images (1080px+)

Real-World Impact

Case Study 1: Lifestyle Creator's Design Transformation

Creator: Xiaohongshu lifestyle and wellness blogger, 8K followers Problem: Engagement plateau, comments: "Content is good but hard to read" Issues Identified: Cluttered layouts, inconsistent fonts, poor contrast, text touching edges

Solution Implemented:

  • Created brand color palette (3 colors + neutrals)

  • Standardized on 2 fonts (Montserrat + Lato)

  • Designed 3 reusable templates in Canva for different content types

  • Added white space (30-50px margins between elements)

  • Increased text size to minimum 24pt for body

Results (60 days):

  • Engagement rate: 2.5% → 6.8% (2.7x improvement)

  • Save rate: 1.2% → 4.5% (3.75x increase)

  • Follower growth: +2,100 (26% growth) - attracted by professional aesthetic

  • Brand inquiries: 5 brands reached out for partnerships (professional = trustworthy)

  • Content creation time: Reduced by 40% (template efficiency)

Key Learning: Consistent templates + mobile optimization = massive engagement gains.

Case Study 2: Educational Account's Visual Overhaul

Creator: Educational tips creator, 15K followers Problem: High value content but low saves, shares Issue: Wall of text, no visual hierarchy, boring design

Solution:

  • Implemented hierarchy: Bold headlines, bullet points, icons

  • Used color strategically: Blue for headings, orange for key takeaways

  • Added white space between sections

  • Created infographic-style layouts for tips

  • Used numbered lists (1, 2, 3) for scannability

Results (90 days):

  • Save rate: 0.8% → 5.2% (6.5x increase - saving for reference)

  • Share rate: 0.5% → 2.8% (5.6x increase - visual worth sharing)

  • Comment quality: Increased - users praising "finally easy to read"

  • Featured by Xiaohongshu: Platform featured post (algorithm rewards visual quality)

  • Course sales: 35% increase in online course sales (trust through professionalism)

Key Learning: Visual hierarchy and scannability dramatically increases save/share behavior.

Case Study 3: Brand's Template System

Brand: Beauty brand with 3 content creators Problem: Inconsistent visual identity across creators, damaged brand recognition Solution:

  • Created brand kit in Canva (colors, fonts, logo, templates)

  • Designed 10 reusable templates for different content types

  • Trained all creators on template usage

  • Centralized approval process to maintain consistency

Results (6 months):

  • Brand consistency: 100% across all posts (vs. 30% before)

  • Recognition: Survey showed 68% recognized posts as same brand (vs. 22% before)

  • Engagement: +45% (consistent aesthetic builds trust)

  • Content efficiency: 60% reduction in design time (templates)

  • Follower growth: +8,000 (strong, recognizable brand identity)

Key Learning: Template systems create efficiency, consistency, and brand recognition.

Related Skills

REQUIRED:

  • cover-design: Designing attention-grabbing first images

  • canva: Canva-specific techniques and workflows

  • design-principles: Fundamental design theory and application

  • visual-storytelling: Communicating narratives through visual elements

RECOMMENDED:

  • color-theory: Advanced color harmony and psychology

  • typography: Font selection and typesetting best practices

  • branding: Building comprehensive visual brand identity

  • infographic-design: Creating information-dense visual content

  • mobile-design: Optimizing specifically for mobile user experience

NEXT STEPS:

  • Audit your current posts: What are your top 3 design weaknesses?

  • Define your brand palette: Choose 2-3 primary colors + neutrals

  • Select 2 fonts: One for headlines, one for body text

  • Create templates: Design 2-3 reusable layouts in Canva

  • Test on mobile: Always preview on phone before publishing

Great graphic layout is invisible - viewers notice the content, not the design. Poor layout is glaringly obvious and undermines credibility. Professional design isn't about being fancy; it's about clarity, hierarchy, and consistency. When design serves content instead of competing with it, engagement follows naturally. Invest time in templates and systems - they pay dividends in efficiency, brand recognition, and audience growth.

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