Creating a low-fidelity prototype in UX design - LogRocket Blog
Briefly

A low-fidelity prototype, also known as a low-fi prototype, is an early-stage, simple product prototype that delivers the core concept of a specific product. Here, "low-fidelity" refers to the level of detail in the visual segments.
UI/UX designers typically start creating low-fidelity prototypes whenever they need to experiment with their ideas in the UX research analysis stage according to their preferences and organization guidelines.
A low-fidelity prototype may use mono-color (usually black, grey, and white) placeholder images, shapes, simple drawings, and texts as design building blocks instead of using modern, colorized UI elements.
In this article, I'll share all about low-fidelity prototypes by discussing their importance, benefits, and differences with high-fidelity prototypes, and best practices.
Read at LogRocket Blog
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