Design a user-friendly flower catalogue app for a local florist that allows customers to easily explore, select, and order flowers, with features that support usability, accessibility, and convenience.
The problem:
Many local florists lack a digital platform where customers can conveniently browse flower collections, compare options, and place orders. This creates friction for users who want a smooth, modern shopping experience.
The goal:
Design a user-friendly flower catalogue app for a local florist that allows customers to easily explore, select, and order flowers, with features that support usability, accessibility, and convenience.
Local Florist Business
Lead UX/UI Designer
Figma
6 Weeks
User Research, Wireframes, High-Fidelity Prototypes, Usability Testing
My role:
UX Designer (Sole designer on the project)
Responsibilities:
I was responsible for the entire UX process including user research, creating personas and user journey maps, defining problem statements, wireframing, prototyping in Figma, conducting usability studies, analyzing results, and iterating on the high-fidelity design of a flower catalogue app for a florist.
User research pain points:
I conducted user interviews and empathy analysis to understand how customers browse and purchase flowers. The research focused on key motivations, frustrations, and common behaviors when shopping for floral arrangements online.
Problem statement:
John is a busy professional who needs a quick and easy way to choose and send flowers because he often shops last-minute and feels overwhelmed by too many choices.
Flower app product and product detail page digital wireframes indicating the userflow, how user will select the product from product page and will be directed towards the product detail page
View Flower Catalog low-fidelity prototype
From home page to product page and moving forward to product detail page, cart icon is appeared any time user can visit the cart to proceed toward and onward to checkout.
To evaluate the usability of the flower catalogue app for a florist, I conducted two rounds of usability studies with a total of five participants. The goal was to understand how easily users could browse floral arrangements, customize their selections, and place an order for delivery or pickup. In the first round, I tested a low-fidelity prototype and gathered feedback on core features such as flower browsing, product customization, and the checkout flow. Based on user observations, I made several design improvements and tested the revised prototype in a second round of usability testing. The findings from both rounds provided valuable insights into user needs and highlighted opportunities to improve the overall user experience.
Here is the link to the high fidelity prototype
Your insights, my design thinking—together, we’ll solve it right