top of page

property-lok

Property-lok was my first project from scratch as the sole UI/UX designer. This was a very challenging and enriching experience as I developed my skills in ways I never imagined.

Objective

To serve the users through developing technologies that help protect against the unauthorized appropriation and sale of missing personal property.

Challenge

To make stealing less profitable through subscriber-based technologies created to identify, locate, and recover missing property.

Solution

A platform where subscribers are able to pre-attach legal claim to personal property for physical and/or financial recovery purposes.

design process

In order to make more accurate decisions, we defined who we were building the product for. We created user personas that served as a guide and inspiration for the design of it.

Frame 1.jpg
Frame 2.jpg

For the MVP, a data flow diagram was created to define the number of screens.

The next step was to define the happy path.  In the second image, I placed lo-fi wireframes

to gain better visibility of how the user flow would look.

Property-Lok Data Flow.jpg
User Flow with Lo-fi Wireframes.jpg

Before designing the interface, I sought inspiration and crafted color palettes that would suit our security app. I chose blues, blacks, and grays symbolizing stability, tranquility, luxury, and sophistication – qualities we aimed to evoke in users.

Color Psychology
Moodboard and Inspiration

Building the design system was the part I enjoyed the most.

I loved creating everything from the logo and its variants to all kinds of buttons, switches, dropdowns, navigation bars, pop-ups, images, and even margins.

Design System

Finally, I created a prototype of the MVP to test its usability.

During this stage, I worked closely with the developer and the QA tester to ensure that everything functioned according to my designs.

bottom of page