About Us
Vuqelari was created for learners who want to study UI/UX design through clear course materials, practical tasks, and structured visual examples. The brand began with a simple observation: many people are interested in interface design, but the first steps often feel scattered. Some materials introduce too many terms at once, while others focus mainly on visual style and leave out the thinking behind screen order, user flow, layout rhythm, and content grouping.

Our team wanted to build a calmer way to study UI/UX design. Before Vuqelari, we often saw learners collecting notes from many places, drawing rough wireframes, and trying to understand why some screens felt readable while others felt confusing. The challenge was not a lack of interest. The challenge was the missing structure between design ideas, screen planning, and practical review.
That is why Vuqelari courses were created as digital learning materials built around modules, examples, tasks, checklists, and review notes. Each course focuses on practical UI/UX topics such as screen anatomy, user flow, wireframes, visual hierarchy, spacing, card layouts, form structure, journey maps, repeated patterns, and layout grids. The materials are made for self-paced study and are written without dependence on named programs, operating systems, or third-party services.
The owner and lead creator of Vuqelari is Illia Pavlushyn, a digital course creator focused on interface planning, UI/UX study structure, layout review, and learning material organization. Illia created Vuqelari after noticing how often beginner learners meet design terms before they understand how those terms work together on a real screen. His approach begins with structure: what a page is for, how content is grouped, where the user starts, what step comes next, and how each section supports the full screen.
Illia’s work with Vuqelari is centered on practical interface thinking. He studies how headings, cards, buttons, forms, notes, and content sections can work together inside course pages, contact screens, FAQ layouts, and learning material examples. Instead of treating UI/UX design as decoration only, he focuses on the quieter parts of screen planning: page purpose, user movement, section order, spacing, labels, review points, and repeated layout patterns.

The first Vuqelari materials were shaped from organized study notes and simple screen planning exercises. These notes included page anatomy outlines, user flow examples, card structure reviews, form layout prompts, spacing questions, and wireframe tasks. Over time, they became a structured course collection for learners who want to study UI/UX design through written explanations and practical review activities.
Illia’s teaching style avoids heavy theory at the beginning. He starts with screen purpose, layout blocks, user steps, spacing, grouping, and action placement. This helps learners understand that UI/UX design is not only about how a screen looks. It is also about how information is arranged, how a person moves through a page, and how each section connects with the next one.
Vuqelari now continues this approach through a collection of UI/UX design courses. Each tier has its own focus. Some courses introduce basic design language. Others explore page direction, screen rhythm, page framing, user flow, visual hierarchy, journey mapping, repeated patterns, and grid structure. Together, the courses create a study path for learners who want organized materials, practical tasks, and calm explanations without loud claims or unrealistic expectations.
Our mission is to help learners study UI/UX design with more order and less noise. We believe that a useful course should explain ideas clearly, show how they appear in interface planning, and give learners space to review and practice. Vuqelari is built for people who want to develop design understanding through thoughtful materials, not through pressure-based messages.
We create digital course materials with care, structure, and attention to detail. Every module is planned to help learners explore interface design step by step: define the screen purpose, organize the content, guide the user path, review hierarchy, adjust spacing, and think before adding visual detail. That is the foundation of Vuqelari and the reason Illia Pavlushyn created this course collection.