How I Started Designing Websites at 13

5 minutes read

Looking back now, it still feels strange to think that my journey into web design started from random internet curiosity during school days.

At that age, I wasn’t thinking about careers, agencies, or building businesses.

I was simply curious.

Most evenings after school were spent in front of a computer exploring random things online, playing games, browsing forums, and trying to understand how websites worked.

One random moment eventually changed everything.

The Search That Started It All

When I was around 11 years old, I came across an online ad that promised something like:

“Earn money online fast.”

The ad itself was probably fake, but it sparked curiosity.

Instead of ignoring it, I searched:
“How to earn money online.”

That search led me into a completely different side of the internet that I had never explored before.

I started discovering:

  • online forums
  • PTC websites
  • digital communities
  • basic online business concepts
  • people building things on the internet

At first, I was just experimenting and exploring.

But slowly, I became fascinated by the idea that someone could actually create something online from scratch.

Earning My First Dollar Online

1 U.S. dollar banknote on white surface

Like many people during that era, I started experimenting with Paid-To-Click websites.

The earnings were tiny.

After weeks of clicking ads and trying random things online, I eventually earned my first dollar.

Financially, it wasn’t meaningful at all.

But mentally, it was huge.

It made me realize the internet wasn’t just entertainment.

It was a place where people could:

  • build things
  • create opportunities
  • learn skills
  • make money
  • connect globally

That realization changed how I looked at technology completely.

Discovering Web Design

While spending time on different websites, I noticed something interesting.

A lot of them looked terrible.

The designs were messy, difficult to navigate, and visually outdated.

I kept thinking:
“Why can’t these websites look better?”

That question slowly pulled me toward web design.

I started searching things like:

  • “How to design websites”
  • “How websites are made”
  • “How to learn HTML and CSS”

Most of my learning happened through:

  • YouTube
  • random tutorials
  • forums
  • experimentation
  • trial and error

Honestly, a huge part of my learning process was just:

  • breaking things
  • fixing them
  • rebuilding layouts
  • testing random ideas

But I enjoyed every part of it.

Building My First Websites

By the time I was around 13, I had already started building simple webpages and experimenting with design more seriously.

None of my early work was perfect.

But every small project taught me something new.

At that point, I wasn’t trying to become “successful.”

I was simply obsessed with improving.

That mindset helped me keep going consistently.

Getting My First Clients

In 2016, I started offering design services online under the name Designz5233.

At first, I worked on:

  • logos
  • banners
  • homepage mockups
  • small graphics
  • basic website work

My very first project was actually free because I just wanted to build a portfolio and gain experience.

Soon after that, I landed my first paid project:
a homepage design worth $3.

The amount itself didn’t matter much.

What mattered was the realization that someone trusted my work enough to pay for it.

That moment gave me a huge confidence boost.

Starting UnikBrushes

As I kept improving, I realized I wanted to build something bigger and more serious around my work.

That’s when I started UnikBrushes.

At first, it was simply my creative identity online.

But over time, it slowly evolved into something much larger.

I started expanding into:

  • WordPress development
  • SEO
  • branding
  • digital marketing
  • e-commerce
  • user experience
  • growth systems

The more businesses I worked with, the more I realized that websites alone weren’t enough.

Businesses needed systems that connected:

  • design
  • development
  • marketing
  • branding
  • content
  • user experience

That thinking eventually became a huge part of how I approached digital work overall.

Learning Through Failure

person taking photo of grey concrete stairs

Not everything worked.

At one point, I even tried building my own PTC platform using money I had earned from projects.

The idea failed.

I lost both time and money.

But honestly, experiences like that taught me more than many successful projects did.

I learned:

  • resilience
  • patience
  • adaptability
  • problem-solving
  • long-term thinking

Over time, I stopped seeing failure as something negative.

I started seeing it as part of the learning process.

The COVID Phase

During the COVID years, I spent even more time learning and expanding my skills.

That period pushed me deeper into:

  • digital marketing
  • Shopify
  • WooCommerce
  • SEO
  • e-commerce systems
  • content workflows

As businesses started moving more aggressively online, I also got opportunities to work on larger and more complex projects.

That phase helped UnikBrushes grow significantly.

A Few Things I’ve Learned Along the Way

Looking back, a few things stand out clearly to me:

Big journeys usually start from very small moments.

Curiosity is incredibly powerful if you keep following it consistently.

You don’t need perfect conditions to begin.

Most growth comes from:

  • repetition
  • experimentation
  • mistakes
  • consistency
  • long-term thinking

And honestly, I still think I’m learning every single day.

Advice for Anyone Starting Out

If you’re getting into web design or any creative field, I’d say:

Start before you feel ready.

You don’t need expensive courses, perfect equipment, or a full roadmap.

A lot of what I learned came from:

  • curiosity
  • free resources
  • experimentation
  • consistency

The internet gives you access to almost everything you need to start learning.

The important part is continuing even when progress feels slow.

Looking Back Now

When I look back at that 13-year-old version of myself experimenting with websites late at night, I honestly never imagined where the journey would eventually lead.

What started as curiosity slowly became:

  • a skill
  • then a profession
  • then a business
  • and eventually a much bigger vision

And I think that’s the beautiful part about starting small.

Sometimes the smallest moments end up changing your entire life.

Web designer Amar Karthik sitting on a chair with a cool black jacket

I’m Amar Karthik, a Web Developer, Designer, and Digital Marketing Specialist with over 10 years of experience building digital solutions, growth systems, and brands. I’m also the Founder & CEO of UnikBrushes, a digital growth agency focused on web design, development, marketing, and user experience.

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