Over the last few months I’ve been building Uilora, a component library focused on animation-first UI for modern web apps.
Today I crossed a small milestone that felt bigger than I expected: I added 10 developer testimonials to the site.
Not fake marketing quotes. Real feedback from people actually using the components.
When I started this project I thought the hardest part would be building the components. Turns out the harder part is getting honest feedback from developers.
A few things I learned while collecting these testimonials:
Developers care more about polish than quantity
Early on I was proud of the number of components. But most feedback I got was about the feel of the UI. Small things like animation smoothness, micro-interactions, and how components behave in real apps mattered more than just adding more components.Documentation matters more than you think
Some people liked the components but struggled integrating them quickly. That pushed me to improve examples, usage snippets, and real-world demos.Animations are surprisingly divisive
Some developers love animation-heavy interfaces. Others prefer very minimal UI. That feedback helped me design components so animations are optional rather than forced.Early users give the best product ideas
A couple of the features I’m building next actually came from conversations with early users rather than my own roadmap.
For context, Uilora currently has 700+ components focused on animated UI patterns, mainly built for Next.js and modern React stacks.
Right now I’m mainly trying to improve the developer experience and understand how people actually use component libraries in real projects.
If you're someone who uses UI libraries a lot, I'm curious:
What makes you trust a component library enough to actually use it in production?
Is it:
documentation
stability
community
performance
something else?
Can Checkout at : https://www.uilora.com/get-started/web/components/content-blocks/testimonials
Would love to hear how other developers evaluate libraries before adopting them.

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