Design

Bridging design and code with AI-native design tools

AI-native design tools that generate system-constrained UI and code help reduce the gap between design prototypes and implementation, making design handoffs simpler and giving designers more ownership over the final experience.

Why the human is still essential here

Designers still shape the visual interface, decide how the experience should work, collaborate with teammates, and review what should move toward implementation.

How people use this

Prompt-to-React screen generation

AI-native tools generate a designed interface alongside usable frontend code so teams can move faster from concept to implementation.

v0 / Figma Make

Component-constrained UI building

AI builds screens from a system of reusable components to keep prototypes closer to what engineering can actually ship.

Figma Make / Framer

Design-to-dev handoff with code

AI helps designers share prototypes that already include code structure, reducing translation work during implementation handoff.

Framer / Galileo AI

Need Help Implementing AI in Your Organization?

I help companies navigate AI adoption -- from strategy to production. Whether you are building your first LLM-powered feature or scaling an agentic system, I can help you get it right.

LLM Orchestration

Design and build LLM-powered products and agentic systems

AI Strategy

Go from idea to production with a clear implementation roadmap

Compliance & Safety

Build AI with human-in-the-loop in regulated environments

Related Prompts (4)

Latest community stories (1)

Personal Story
Medium

How AI became part of my UX design workflow

And what it looked like to work on a design team that intentionally experimented with AI for several months

It’s been a while since I posted here. I was honestly getting a little tired of the β€œAI is replacing designers” or β€œthe design process is dead” headlines.


When I opened Medium to write this article, I found a draft I’d started back in 2023 about how I was using ChatGPT in my day-to-day as a product designer. I never published it. Looking back, I think I was afraid of how the UX community would react, so I eventually gave up on it.


Finding that draft reminded me how much my workflow has changed since then. So, here’s my second attempt at writing this article. If you’re reading this… I finally hit Publish. πŸ˜…

LL
LaΓ­s Lara VaccoProduct Designer
Jul 15, 2026