Senior designers make decisions quickly that junior designers struggle with for hours. This isn't magic — it's the result of enough specific, reflective experience that explicit reasoning has been compressed into fast pattern recognition. Design intuition can be developed deliberately.
Active vs Passive Consumption
Looking at design is passive. Analyzing design is active. The difference: passive consumption gives you exposure. Active analysis builds the frameworks that produce intuition. When you see a UI you find effective or ineffective, the question to ask is "why?" — and the answer should be specific enough to generalize to other contexts.
The Critique Practice
A weekly practice that accelerates intuition: pick one UI you interact with (any app, any website) and write three specific observations about what it does well and one about what it does poorly. No more than 200 words. The constraint forces precision. Over time, your evaluation framework becomes automatic.
Building a Reference Library
Collect examples of design you find effective in a personal library with annotations about why. Not just screenshots — your written analysis of what makes them work. This converts passive exposure into active reference material and builds the pattern library that becomes intuition over time.
Deliberate Iteration
Intuition requires iteration, not just exposure. Design something, get feedback, understand why your design decision was wrong or right, internalize it, apply it. The feedback loop is what compresses knowledge into intuition. Designing one thing you never get feedback on develops taste more slowly than designing twenty things with active critique.