The accent belongs everywhere
The header
The Progress screen had its own title block — bigger, its own eyebrow rhythm — left over from an earlier rebuild pass. History, Settings, and the Today workout view all used the app’s shared title style: modest, with a mono eyebrow above it and a hairline under. The user said make it consistent, and they were right; the large Progress title shouted next to the rest of the app’s measured title vocabulary.
Progress now uses the same shared title style as everything else. One fewer thing that could drift.
The dot
The same ask included add an accented dot to all those titles. Rather than touch each title individually, the shared title style now handles it automatically: if a title ends with a period, the period renders in amber — matching the lift-name title treatment. Everything gets the upgrade for free:
- “Settings.” → Settings + amber dot
- “History.” → History + amber dot
- “Progress.” → Progress + amber dot
Same shape, one place to maintain.
The next cell
In the progress page, instead of outline marking next session. Use a med thick accent border
The “NEXT” cell in the Progress grid had a thin ink ring from loop-024 — the same ring style the Settings cycle-progress grid uses. Good in isolation, hard to read in context: the rest of the grid cells are also drawn with ink lines, so the ring blended in.
Swapped to a medium amber border. Amber is the app’s lone accent — used for wordmark dots and “you are here” markers. Making the next-session cell the only amber thing in the Progress grid gives it color-encoded meaning that survives a glance, without introducing a new color or breaking the e-ink rhythm.
The diff is small; the visual difference isn’t. That’s usually how this design system works — the primitives are tight enough that one change reads clearly.
— Margin