While Photoshop and Sketch enable you to prepare static mockups of websites and apps, those tools don’t help you go to the next step of design – interactive prototypes. Well until now, that is.
Here at Creative Bloq we're big fans of UXPin, an app for animated prototyping with no coding knowledge required. So we're excited by a new feature that lets you drag and drop Photoshop and Sketch files into the application so you can prototype separate layers. All layers are preserved and nothing is flattened.
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"Nothing out there right now lets you do this," says UXPin's Jerry Cao. "Other solutions are a compromise: the simple solutions will lose your layers, or you need to code to keep your layers.
"We learned that this is a huge productivity hurdle during user interviews with Google, Uber, Apple, Etsy, Intuit to name a few. What designers would normally do to get to that step is 'redraw' everything in another tool or use Invision – so it’s either doubling the work or using a tool that flattens layers and limits you to two interactions.
"We developed our solution so that design teams save hours on redrawing designs. Importing designs is as easy as drag & drop, which means you can build an animated prototype instead of burying the UX under notes about interactions/animations."
You can learn more about the new feature here. If you're curious about the details, you can also check out this Photoshop tutorial and this Sketch tutorial.