
I learned about Framer from a designer on my team. Tried building my first landing page with it. I won't lie, there's a bit of a learning curve, but the experience is very intuitive. The tutorials really impressed me with their quality and simplicity. I used the AI prompt to generate a sitemap for a children's educational product website. Loved the templates! Then I iterated on the text, block layout, and played with the color scheme. Finally, I exported the result to Figma. Ended up with a solid, good-quality basic website that definitely streamlined the content and design development work. If only I could have published the site directly on Framer, it would have been perfect!
What's great
Figma integration (8)no-code platform (32)AI design features (9)template marketplace (3)
What needs improvement
complex setup (9)
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It broke my brain at first. I’m used to dumping notes into folders or endless pages. Here? Everything’s an object. Projects, books, random ideas — you turn them into little building blocks and connect them. Took me 3 days to stop fighting it.
But when it clicked? Magic.
Suddenly my daily notes linked to a personal project, which linked to a book quote I’d saved months ago. Felt like my thoughts were finally talking to each other. The graph view shows these wild connections I never planned.
Daily Notes saved me — perfect for chaotic mornings. Dump thoughts there, then later turn fragments into proper objects.
Downsides:
That learning curve is REAL. Not for casual note-takers.
But after 3 weeks I’m hooked.
It’s not perfect, but it gets how messy thinking actually works. Lets me wander, then pulls threads together. If you’re tired of notes feeling dead — try it. Just push through day 3.
What's great
graph view (1)flexible note linking (1)object-based organization (2)
What needs improvement
learning curve (1)
Report
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