100 Tiny Vibe Coding Projects
I've been a designer for a while now, and I don't think design has ever shifted this fast in such a short time.
Before I officially called myself a designer — I studied architecture at uni — I dabbled in front-end coding. Back when you built things in a plain .txt file or, if you were lucky, had access to Dreamweaver. Being able to code your own designs felt like a superpower, but it came with a catch: go too ambitious and the build becomes a nightmare; stay too safe, and you start designing around what you can code, not what you actually want to make. Eventually, I let it go, just before HTML5 changed everything.
Then vibe coding showed up.
I hadn't paid much attention to it until I started a new role at a tech company where building things yourself isn't just encouraged — it's expected. The idea is genuinely exciting, but also a little paralysing. Where do you even start?
So I'm starting here. 100 Tiny Vibe Coding Projects is my way of learning by doing, breaking things on purpose, and having fun with it. What excites me most is the possibility of bringing it all together — my illustration work, the random things I care about outside of work, and this new way of building. My first project is already up: Bayanihan Run.