skills/platform-instagram-visual-system/SKILL.md
Designs a written Instagram visual identity system covering feed grid planning, mood board creation, colour palette selection, editing/filter consistency, and brand visual standards. Output is a structured visual brief the client or their designer can implement directly. Invoke when onboarding a new Instagram account, when a client's feed looks inconsistent and a unified visual identity is needed, or when briefing a designer or content creator on Instagram visual standards. Based on Hietaniemi (2022), Secret Strategies for Instagram Growth.
npx skillsauth add peterbamuhigire/social-media-skills platform-instagram-visual-systemInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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This skill produces a written visual brief and standards document. It defines what the visual system should look like — it does not produce graphic designs, images, or visual assets. That production work is handled by the client's designer or content creator using this brief.
Cross-reference:
platform-instagram — full Instagram strategy (audience, content, growth tactics)04-brand-voice-intake — brand standards intake (voice, tone, existing brand manual)playbook-social-media-brand-style-guide — broader brand style guide across all platformsSKILL.md; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.references/ directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this SKILL.md execution-focused.Before generating any deliverable, ask for the following:
The Instagram feed is viewed as a 3-column grid. The visual impression of the grid matters as much as individual posts. Plan the grid before producing individual posts.
| Style | How It Works | Best For | |---|---|---| | Alternating | Posts alternate between two visual styles (e.g., quote graphic / photo) | Brands with limited photography; consistent, predictable rhythm | | Row-by-row | Each row of 3 posts shares a colour, theme, or format | High-production brands with planned shoots | | Column-by-column | Each column follows a pattern (e.g., column 1 = products, column 2 = lifestyle, column 3 = quotes) | Brands with distinct content pillars | | Checkerboard | Light and dark posts alternate | Strong contrast brands; works with 2-tone palettes | | Free-flowing | No strict grid pattern; cohesion from colour palette and editing style alone | Creator accounts with high photography volume |
Recommend one of the following free tools to visualise the feed before posting:
A mood board defines the visual direction before any content is produced. It prevents inconsistency and gives designers, photographers, and content creators a shared reference point. The client must approve the mood board before content production begins.
Apply the following standards when selecting inspiration images for East African clients:
If the client has an existing brand identity: Extract 3–5 colours from the brand manual. Request HEX codes; do not rely on approximations from a logo image.
If building from scratch: Apply the following proportional structure:
Record every colour in all three formats. Include this table in the visual standards document:
| Colour Role | Name | HEX | RGB | Pantone | When Used | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | Dominant | [Name] | #XXXXXX | R=, G=, B= | [PMS] | Backgrounds, primary graphics | | Secondary | [Name] | #XXXXXX | R=, G=, B= | [PMS] | Accents, CTA buttons, borders | | Neutral 1 | [Name] | #XXXXXX | R=, G=, B= | [PMS] | Backgrounds, text containers | | Neutral 2 | [Name] | #XXXXXX | R=, G=, B= | [PMS] | Body text, dividers |
Note: Pantone equivalents are required only if the client produces print collateral.
Visual consistency on Instagram comes from applying the same editing adjustments to every post photograph. Define and document these settings as a replicable preset.
Apply these adjustments in the following order for every photo. Values below are starting points; calibrate to the client's specific palette and photography conditions.
| # | Adjustment | Recommended Range | Rationale | |---|---|---|---| | 1 | Exposure | +0 to +20 | Slightly brightened for EA bright-light and smartphone cameras | | 2 | Contrast | −5 to +10 | Reduce for warm, inviting feel; increase for bold or fashion brands | | 3 | Highlights | −10 to −30 | Recover blown sky and window highlights common in EA outdoor shots | | 4 | Shadows | +10 to +30 | Open shadows to reveal detail on darker skin tones | | 5 | Saturation | −10 to +15 | Reduce for neutral or luxury brands; increase for vibrant consumer brands | | 6 | Colour Temperature | +5 to +15 (warm) | Calibrate to a consistent warmth aligned with the client's palette | | 7 | Sharpening | +10 to +20 | Compensate for smartphone camera softness; avoid over-sharpening portraits |
Calibrate each value specifically for the client during onboarding. Document the final agreed values in the visual standards document as a named preset (e.g., "BrandName Lightroom Preset").
Instagram native filters are inconsistent — they apply different effects to different source images and cannot be saved as a replicable preset. Do not use Instagram native filters for brand accounts.
Recommend instead:
Save the agreed preset settings within the tool and share access with anyone producing content for the account.
Compile all outputs from Sections 1–4 into a single written visual standards brief. This document is the deliverable. A designer or content creator must be able to implement it without further instruction from the consultant.
Produce the brief with the following sections in order:
1. Feed Grid Style State the chosen grid style, explain why it was selected for this client, and list any grid-specific rules (e.g., "every third post must be a quote graphic").
2. Colour Palette Include the full colour table (HEX, RGB, Pantone, and usage rule for each colour).
3. Typography
4. Photography Style
5. Graphic Template Rules
6. Editing Preset Settings List the 7 calibrated adjustment values by name. State the tool used (Lightroom Mobile or VSCO) and where the saved preset is stored.
7. What to Avoid A named list of visual styles, colours, editing approaches, or content formats that are explicitly rejected for this account. Include 5–8 items minimum. This section is as important as the positive standards — it prevents scope creep and brief drift when working with external creators.
Generate the visual standards brief as a structured markdown document with clear section headings. Use tables for the colour palette, editing preset, and typography. Use numbered lists for the mood board checklist and the what-to-avoid section.
The brief must be self-contained. Do not reference this skill or the consultant's process — the document is written for the client and their creative team.
tools
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