Milligram CSS
Radix UI
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.
Milligram CSS is a minimalist CSS framework that weighs in at just 2KB gzipped, making it one of the lightest options available for developers who value speed and efficiency. It follows a clean, modern design approach with sensible defaults, so you can get started quickly without having to overwrite a ton of styles. Milligram uses the flexible grid system powered by Flexbox, making layouts intuitive and responsive right out of the box.
What makes Milligram stand out is its balance between simplicity and usability. Unlike heavier frameworks, it doesn’t come bundled with unnecessary UI components, which keeps your project lean and fast.


Radix UI is a modern component library offering headless, unstyled, and accessible primitives for React. These primitives include tooltips, dialogs, dropdowns, switches, and more, giving you full control over their design and behavior.
It's built for developers who want to create custom design systems without reinventing the wheel.


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, Milligram is open-source and distributed under the MIT license.
Install via npm/yarn/bower, use the CDN link, or leverage the Milligram CLI to generate a simple boilerplate.
Nope, just include the CSS file in your project’s <head> and you're set.
It’s ideal for quick prototypes, clean documentation pages, landing pages, and any performance-sensitive project looking for a minimal styling foundation.
It's a headless UI library that provides unstyled, accessible primitives like Dialog, Tooltip, Tabs, etc.
No. It leaves styling completely up to you — use Tailwind, CSS modules, or styled-components.
Yes, but it depends on your implementation — it doesn’t manage themes out-of-the-box.
100%. It strictly follows WCAG and ARIA best practices.
Yes. It only works with React (and supports TypeScript out-of-the-box).