A curated list of awesome resources for SketchApp, including videos, guides, articles, plugins, templates, and community links.
Awesome Sketch is a curated list of high-quality resources for SketchApp, a popular design tool. It aggregates videos, articles, plugins, templates, and community links to help designers and developers learn, improve workflows, and stay updated. The project solves the problem of scattered information by providing a single, organized repository for everything related to Sketch.
Designers, developers, and students using SketchApp who want to learn efficiently, discover plugins, access templates, and engage with the community. It's especially valuable for those new to Sketch seeking structured learning paths.
Developers and designers choose Awesome Sketch because it saves time by filtering out low-quality resources, offers community-vetted recommendations, and covers all aspects of Sketch—from tutorials to advanced plugins. Its curated approach ensures users access only the most useful and up-to-date materials.
:books: delightful stuff for SketchApp students.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
It centralizes diverse Sketch resources—videos, articles, plugins, and templates—into categorized sections like 'Videos' and 'Plugins', saving users from scattered searches.
The README actively encourages contributions and links to active communities like TeamSketch and Reddit, ensuring crowd-sourced relevance and updates.
It offers beginner-friendly playlists like 'Sketch 3 Tutorials' and advanced guides such as 'Mastering the Bézier Curve', catering to all skill levels.
Highlights essential plugins like Content Generator and Sketch Measure with descriptions, helping users enhance productivity without trial-and-error.
As a GitHub repo, updates depend on manual contributions; some links may break over time, and the README admits users must 'keep up to date' via external sources.
While curated, it lacks user ratings or recency indicators, so resource quality isn't dynamically validated, risking outdated or low-value entries.
It exclusively serves Sketch users, offering no guidance for multi-tool workflows or comparisons with alternatives like Figma, which may hinder broader design teams.