The Role of Placeholder Text in Design
Every designer has used “Lorem Ipsum” at some point. It’s the industry standard for a reason: it allows you to focus on the visual hierarchy, typography, and layout of a website without getting distracted by the actual words.
However, as we move into more complex UI/UX design in 2026, how you use that text matters more than ever.
When to Use Standard Lorem Ipsum
Standard placeholder text is best for:
- Initial Wireframes: When the client hasn’t provided copy yet.
- Font Testing: Seeing how a specific typeface handles different character combinations.
- Grid Layouts: Checking how columns and blocks of text wrap on mobile devices.
The Pitfalls of “Bad” Placeholders
If you use the same paragraph over and over, you might miss how a design looks with short versus long content. This is why professional designers vary their dummy text lengths.
How to Prototyping Faster with Zappelle
Instead of searching for a generator every time you need a filler, keep your workflow inside one tab:
- Generate exactly what you need: Use the Zappelle Lorem Ipsum Generator to create specific amounts of text—whether it’s just one sentence for a button or five paragraphs for a blog layout.
- Check the Count: If you’re designing a social media card with character limits, paste your dummy text into the Word Counter Pro to ensure the design doesn’t “break” when real data is added.
- Clean up the Paste: If you’re copying placeholder text from an old design PDF, run it through the Line Break Remover first to ensure it pastes cleanly into your design software like Figma or Adobe XD.
