How I Fixed Gmail’s UX and Saved My Sanity

I miss Inbox, so I hacked Gmail with a little CSS magic

Kelli Borgonia
Modus

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Before and after CSS hacks. Images courtesy of the author.

“O“Oh my God. If I cannot change this interface, I’m going to go insane,” was all I could think when I opened up Gmail for the first time in years and faced the transition from Inbox to Gmail. Any other die-hard Inbox fans feel the same?

When Google announced that Inbox would be killed, I was devastated. I procrastinated and avoided the switch back to Gmail, savoring every last moment with Inbox. Every few weeks I logged in to Gmail, clicked around, immediately felt overwhelmed, then promptly closed my browser. Then Inbox started to threaten doom and gloom with a big, bold alert message.

Inbox is dying.

So I blocked off a few downtime hours each week to deal with it.

For the most mileage possible, this takes work. You could apply my CSS Stylesheet for the same UI skin, though the real fix involves implementing your own set of filters and tags that make sense for you. It’s a combination of:

  • Using the tools in Gmail that do work, such as filters, settings, and tab structure.
  • Personal restraint in using tags…

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Kelli Borgonia
Modus
Writer for

Product Owner of AirshipCMS.io, UX Designer, Information Architect, Developer Team Lead, and Illustrator.