All About Something

We exclusively publish articles about Medium and Substack. If you want to share some tips, make…

Follow publication

Member-only story

Everything you need to know about atomic design

Carlo Zeno
All About Something
4 min readFeb 15, 2025

--

A banner displaying each stage of atomic design: atoms, molecules, organisms, templates, and pages

Article contents

  1. What is Atomic Design?
  2. Why do you need Atomic Design?
  3. When should you use Atomic Design?
  4. How do you use Atomic Design?
  5. Key Takeaways

What is Atomic Design?

In 2016, Brad Frost introduced Atomic Design as a modular methodology for building simple, maintainable, pattern libraries. It does this by building larger, more complex UI components from smaller and simpler UI components.¹ Atomic Design buckets these components into five categories: atoms, molecules, organisms, templates, and pages. We’ll run through each type below, but the tl;dr is that “atoms” represent the absolute simplest design element and “templates” represent the most complex.

Defining component categories

Atoms are “foundational building blocks.” In other words, they represent the most basic interface elements, such as buttons, icons, and text fields. They serve as your application’s core, supporting structures.

Example 1: A search icon represents a single “atom” within a much larger pattern library.
Example 1: A search icon represents a single “atom” within a much larger pattern library.

Create an account to read the full story.

The author made this story available to Medium members only.
If you’re new to Medium, create a new account to read this story on us.

Or, continue in mobile web

Already have an account? Sign in

All About Something
All About Something

Published in All About Something

We exclusively publish articles about Medium and Substack. If you want to share some tips, make (respectful) fun of the boss, or comment on the latest announcement, this is the place to do so.

Carlo Zeno
Carlo Zeno

Written by Carlo Zeno

Top writer in poetry and satire. Migrant. Expat. INFP. Poet. Satirist. Tragedian. Tutor. Public Servant.

Responses (18)

Write a response