Fleurette Habit is an aesthetic habit tracker for iPhone and Apple Watch built around a restrained heatmap dashboard. Each habit has one accent, one clear action, and a grid that turns time into a visible pattern. Twelve themes change the mood without moving the controls. Petal and Dusk remain free; Habit+ adds ten more.
Beauty should clarify progress
A screen can be pastel and still be information-dense. Fleurette’s rounded cells use four intensity levels, visible gutters, and a shape cue for today in the iPhone app. Habit cards avoid decorative rings and progress bars that repeat the same fact. Large check targets stay on the right, habit context stays on the left, and the grid is the hero.
Twelve themes, one semantic system
Every theme changes surfaces, text, accents, grid ramps, and dark-mode contrast through shared semantic tokens. That matters because a “theme” should be more than a wallpaper. Dusk and Midnight Iris are designed as full dark surfaces; light themes range from yellow Buttercup and green Meadow to Lavender Field, Wisteria, and Dusty Rose. Increase Contrast and Reduce Motion remain part of the design instead of afterthoughts.
A gentle voice is part of the interface
A missed day is not a character judgment. Fleurette distinguishes skipped, vacation, missed, slipped, and completed states so the copy can be accurate. When a streak breaks, the grid remains: every square still represents work nobody can take away. “My why” keeps the personal reason nearby without turning it into social content or a public profile.
Widgets make the aesthetic useful
The same grid language appears in Home and Lock Screen widgets, StandBy, Control Center, Apple Watch complications, and the Smart Stack. Those compact surfaces omit iPhone-only details and fit the available canvas instead of shrinking a screenshot. A small single-habit grid, days-clean tile, and quick-log controls stay free; Habit+ adds dashboard, mosaic, streak, Lock Screen, StandBy, Watch, and per-widget styling.
Private design feels calmer
There is no account, ad network, analytics SDK, or social feed competing for attention. The protected local store is the default. Private iCloud and read-only Health connections are optional and off by default. The result is an app that can look soft because it does not need engagement traps.