In hindsight, I suppose it was only a matter of time after Anthropic made Claude capable of generating charts and diagrams that the company would then begin offering a more robust image editor. Now, a little more than a month after that release, Anthropic has announced Claude Design, a new research preview that allows subscribers to use Claude to generate designs, prototypes, slides and more.
"Claude Design gives designers room to explore widely and everyone else a way to produce visual work," Anthropic says of its newest product. As with its previous forays into image generation, the company isn't calling this, well, an image generator. Instead, Anthropic describes Opus 4.7, the system powering the app, as its most capable vision model to date. In other words, you won't be using Claude Design to whip up a picture of a cat in space eating a lasagna.
As you might expect, every project in Claude Design starts with a prompt. From there, Anthropic notes users can refine Claude's outputs through conversation, inline comments and direct edits. Like Adobe's recently announced AI assistant, Claude will also generate custom sliders that correspond to specific elements in a design, which the user can push and pull to modify those elements. For instance, in the screenshot below, you can see how Claude has tweaked the interface to allow the user to adjust the glow and density of arcs it used to illustrate a connected network.

Anthropic has also built an onboarding process that allows Claude to build an internal visual language after reading your organization's codebase and existing design documents. "Every project after that uses your colors, typography, and comments automatically," according to the company. Outside of text prompts, there's also support for image and document uploads, and Anthropic has even included a web capture tool so enterprise customers can snapshot elements from their company's website. There's also built-in sharing, and you can export a design directly to Claude Code. In the coming weeks, Anthropic has promised to make it easier to build integrations with its new app.
Claude Design arrives in the same week that both Adobe and Canva released their own visual AI assistants. If Anthropic is preparing to eat Canva’s lunch, it's doing so in a strange way given that you can export your Claude Design projects to Canva. If you want to try the new app for yourself, it's available as part of Anthropic's Pro, Max, Team and Enterprise subscriptions, with usage running up against your usage limits.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/anthropic-now-has-a-design-assistant-too-150000903.html?src=rss
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