The Dietary Guidelines for Americans reset U.S. nutrition policy by restoring science, common sense, and real food as the foundation of national health.
Eat Real Food is a government nutrition site that actually looks good — clean modular sections, generous whitespace, and rich food photography that makes broccoli and salmon feel aspirational rather than clinical. The page builds a clear narrative arc from problem to solution, anchoring a new dietary framework through well-organized category grids that reward scanning without losing the reader mid-scroll.
It’s a surprisingly strong reference for public-interest design: proof that authoritative content and accessible visual hierarchy don’t have to fight each other. Designers and marketers working on health or education brands will find the card-based layout and photo-forward approach worth borrowing for projects that need warmth alongside credibility.
— landing.love