Niksha Manjunath
www.linkedin.com/in/niksha-manjunath-307214251/
Niksha Manjunath, Studio - A workspace that brings your project and tools together.
You create a project. Connect Figma, Pinterest, Safari, Notes app. Create folders named Inspo, downloads folder. Done once. Every time you open that project, only the files that belong to it appear. You are already inside the work.
Niksha Manjunath, Timer and Weather App
When I thought of a weather app, the first image that came to my mind was a window.
That’s how we check the weather every day, we look outside.
I didn’t want another standard app with icons and numbers.
I wanted it to feel like looking through my window, personal and surreal.
Niksha Manjunath, LUMNA - Museum App
The MOHA Museum is hosting a special exhibition titled The Spectrum Within. The mobile app, LUMNA, was designed to let visitors explore five artists’ works and purchase related merchandise. Users can browse, personalise items with custom messages, preview them, and checkout, all within a seamless, interactive experience.
The concept is built around transition and emotion.
The app begins in black and white, representing silence, calm, and curiosity. As users explore deeper, entering the artist’s world, color gradually appears, symbolising discovery, creativity, and emotion.
Niksha Manjunath, Bauhaus Dreamscape Animation
Bauhaus is a German art movement focused on incorporating together
different forms of art into a single, cohesive style. Designs from this
movement often feature angular shapes, abstract elements, geometric
patterns, and a palette of primary colors.
My final design was inspired by playful colors and objects. I aimed to incorporate vibrant hues, geometric shapes, and a sense of fun into this design.
View the full video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xFiDtzCmHs
Niksha Manjunath, Pebbl - Time Management App
This project reimagines the Pickle Jar Theory into a mobile time management app for Gen Z, helping users prioritize tasks by visually sorting them into a digital jar with rocks, pebbles, and sand. Tasks are displayed as color coded pill shaped blocks, stacked by priority in a clean, dark themed interface. The design process involved wire framing, UI development, and user testing, where feedback improved drag and drop interaction, visual clarity, and overall flow. Key design choices like vibrant pills, a dynamic jar structure, and simplified analytics were made to support visual learning, intuitive use, and daily reflection. The result is a clear, focused tool for managing time efficiently.