Chota CSS
Vanilla Framework CSS
You know how building a website can feel like a lot, especially when you’re trying to style every little thing yourself? Buttons, forms, layouts… it adds up fast. That’s where UI frameworks really save the day. They give you a bunch of premade design elements that you can just drop in and go. It’s like having a design starter pack that helps your site look clean and professional, without spending forever tweaking the details.
Chota CSS is a micro like ~3 KB ultra-lightweight CSS framework built on the idea of "less is more." It’s designed to give you just the essentials a simple grid system, clean typography, forms, and utility classes without the extra bulk that slows projects down. With its minimal size and no need for preprocessing, Chota is one of the easiest frameworks to pick up and use.
Unlike heavy frameworks that come packed with complex components, Chota focuses on speed, simplicity, and performance. You can drop it into your project and instantly have a clean, responsive base to build on, making it perfect for prototypes, small apps, or any project where minimal bloat and faster load times matter most.


Vanilla Framework is an open-source, lightweight, and extensible CSS framework developed by Canonical (the creators of Ubuntu). It’s designed to provide a consistent and responsive design foundation without unnecessary bloat. Unlike component-heavy frameworks such as Bootstrap or Foundation, Vanilla focuses on clean base styles, responsive layouts, and utility classes that can be extended into full design systems.
It’s particularly popular for enterprise projects and design systems where consistency, accessibility, and scalability matter more than having hundreds of prebuilt UI widgets.


UI frameworks make building a polished website way easier. Whether you're working on something simple or a big project, they help you get things looking just right without having to stress over every little design decision. With ready-to-use components, responsive layouts, and modern styles, you can build faster and smarter.
So, pick one that works for you, and start creating a site that looks amazing from the get-go.
Yes, Chota is open-source under the MIT license.
Just include the CSS file via CDN:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://unpkg.com/chota">
Or install via npm/yarn and import it.
Absolutely, just override CSS variables within your :root to change colors, fonts, spacing, grid settings, etc.
Yes. You can switch to dark mode by overriding variables (e.g., --bg-color, --font-color) in your CSS.
No, it's a CSS-only toolkit. For interactive elements (like modals), you'll need to add JavaScript separately.
Yes, it is open-source and completely free to use under the LGPLv3 license.
No, it’s a CSS-only framework, so you need to implement JavaScript for dropdowns, modals, etc.
Yes, for basic usage. But customization requires some knowledge of Sass.
It is used by Canonical (Ubuntu) and related projects, but developers can also use it for general web projects.
If you want a lightweight, enterprise-ready design system with a focus on accessibility, Vanilla is great. But if you need ready-to-use components with JS support, Bootstrap might be better.