Enhance your CSS Reset with your Design System
If you're starting a web project, you're probably starting with a CSS reset, and for most of us, that means reaching for a trusted community solution - dropping it in and moving on. If you're building a design system, though, that habit may be working against you. The existing solutions The community reset ecosystem is genuinely good. Each tool approaches the browser compatibility problem from a slightly different angle. Some examples include: Eric Meyer's Reset is a classic: it zeros out margins, padding, and font sizes across every element, giving you a completely blank slate. It's minimal and predictable, which made it influential. Normalize.css smooths over inconsistencies while preserving the ones that are actually useful. sanitize.css and modern-normalize continue that evolution - incorporating contemporary best practices like box-sizing: border-box , improved form element handling, and accessibility-aware defaults. The problem isn't that any of these are bad. The problem is that they're all deliberately, necessarily generic. They can't know anything about your typeface, your color palette, your spacing scale, or how your interactive elements should behave. That's by design - they're tools for everyone, which means they're perfectly tailored for no one. The problem If you're building a design system, generic is exactly what you don't want your reset to be. The moment you drop in one of these resets and start building, you find yourself doing a second round of work. You apply your typeface to body . You reset margins on headings. You make form elements inherit fonts. You define focus styles. You're re-resetting - applying your design language on top of a layer that just cleared out the browser's defaults and replaced them with... more defaults you'll override. Worse, that duplication doesn't stay in one place. Every component you build either re-declares these foundational styles or silently assumes they're already set upstream. You end up with either redundanc