We have spent twenty years watching people squint at screens like that, and it taught us one stubborn lesson: past a point, piling on more just buries the answer. So we built the opposite. Rare Styles is an open-source design library where every component starts from the decision the reader is trying to make, shows that, and quietly drops the rest. We call the habit Digital Rareism, which is a grand name for a plain discipline: only the rare survives, and less earns its keep only when it is left in on purpose.
It is also not a mood board. We run our own products on it, the same tokens, type and restraint that make a dashboard, an invoice and a forecast feel like one calm thing instead of three teams' arguments. We had to live with it long before we asked anyone else to.
Because it is open source, there is nothing to book and nobody to email. Take the components, drop them into your project, fork them, change your mind at two in the morning. The documentation and the examples that actually make sense live at raredigits.art, and the code is on GitHub. Have a proper look first. That is genuinely the whole pitch.
Warranty and SLA
And if you like it enough to build something serious on it, there is a grown-up option. We sell a commercial licence with a warranty and an SLA, which in plain words is a guarantee that it works and a phone number that answers when something breaks the night before a launch. Free and open for the curious, a contract for the people whose quarter depends on it.
In an industry that mistakes more for better, leaving things out is the radical move. Rarity endures.