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chore(skill): audit cleanup — captured assets are first-class primaries
Three follow-ups caught by a post-restructure audit pass. All three were places where the earlier "compose primary, asset is accent" framing survived after the step-3 and step-5 paragraphs already got the primitive-toolkit rewrite. Cleans up the contradiction so the skill speaks with one voice: captured assets can be primary content; the narrow no-go is just pasting product-UI screenshots. - step-2-brief.md:80 — the "flip it" example said agents should reframe "the hero illustration centers the opener" into "kinetic typography ... hero illustration as ambient depth." That reverses the dial-back: captured illustrations CAN center an opener. The flip-it rule now applies narrowly to product-UI screenshots; for captured logos/illustrations/hero art, no flip is needed. - step-2-brief.md:149 — option-template guidance said "primary content is 'the screenshot of X'" was forbidden. Narrowed to "primary content is a pasted product-UI screenshot." Other captured assets (SVG logos, illustrations, hero art) are valid primaries when the concept calls for them. - step-3-storyboard.md:314 — Common-accent-uses bullet implied accents are always layered on "composed UI." Reframed: list accent uses for when the primary is something else; when the captured asset IS the primary (logo opener, hero parallax), document it under Composition, not Accents.
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skills/website-to-hyperframes/references/step-2-brief.md

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@@ -77,9 +77,9 @@ Once those answers exist, **then** sketch the composed-beat directions — but g
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> Brand accents I could layer in: [list 1-3 captured assets that *might* earn a place: the SVG logo for opener/closer, a hero illustration as a depth layer in one scene, a gradient image as an ambient bg wash. Note these are candidates, not assignments — most beats won't need any.]"
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**Important:** Lead every direction with **what the beat communicates and what it's composed of** — never with "the [asset] does X." If your first instinct is "the dashboard screenshot flies in," flip it: "Compose the dashboard from divs and animate it inside a 3D MacBook." If your first instinct is "the hero illustration centers the opener," flip it: "Open with kinetic typography of the value prop; the hero illustration can wash behind it as ambient depth."
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**Important:** Lead every direction with **what the beat communicates**, then with **how it's built** (which primitives). The narrow no-go: if your first instinct is "the product-UI screenshot flies in," flip it — compose the UI from divs and CSS instead. That's the slideshow pattern this skill exists to break. For captured logos, illustrations, and hero art, no flip is needed — they're valid primary visuals when the concept calls for them.
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The captured assets are a brand toolkit you reach for late, where they serve the concept — never the starting point.
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The captured assets are a brand toolkit you reach for late in the storyboard, where they serve the concept — never as the starting point of the concept itself.
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Present options:
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> **Option C — Demonstration (narrated walkthrough):** Three composed UI scenes — kanban from cards-as-divs, AI chat with typewriter narration sync, command palette with character-typed search — each in the brand palette with the captured logo stamped top-left as identity. CSS crossfades between. Narration walks each one. ~35s, full VO.
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Each option states: the arc, the composed visuals carrying it, where (if anywhere) a captured asset shows up as an accent. **Never** an option whose primary content is "the screenshot of X" — if you find yourself writing one, flip it: name what gets composed, then where the brand accent lands on top.
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Each option states: the arc, the primary visuals carrying it (composed or captured — whichever fits the beat), and any brand accents layered on top. **Never** an option whose primary content is a pasted product-UI screenshot — if you find yourself writing one, flip it: name what gets composed instead. Captured SVGs, illustrations, hero art, and brand photography are fine as primary visuals when the concept calls for them.
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Let the user pick one or combine elements.
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skills/website-to-hyperframes/references/step-3-storyboard.md

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**Accents (decoration only — what brand-inflects the beat):**
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- Optional. Most beats need 0-1 accent. Format: `capture/assets/<filename>` — how it appears: position, opacity, treatment, motion (e.g. `capture/assets/logo.svg` — top-left, 60×60, fades in at 0.4s, breathes during hold).
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- Common accent uses: brand logo stamped on composed UI, hero illustration as depth layer, gradient image as ambient bg wash, brand mark on a composed pricing card.
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- If a beat has no obvious accent need, leave this blank. The composed visual is enough.
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- Common accent uses (when the primary visual is something else): brand logo stamped on a UI beat, hero illustration as a depth layer behind kinetic type, gradient image as ambient background wash. When the captured asset IS the primary visual (logo drawing itself on the opener, hero illustration with parallax as a hero beat), it isn't an accent — it's the beat content; document it under Composition, not here.
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- If a beat has no obvious accent need, leave this blank. The primary visual is enough.
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Write this section for THIS project's actual brand and the assets audited above — not from memory.
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