Google’s Stitch 2.0 Turns UI Design Into Seconds—Not Hours
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| ▲ 816 upvotes on ProductHunt
Google just released Stitch 2.0, an AI-native design tool that creates production-ready user interfaces using natural language commands, voice input, and intelligent agents. Users describe what they want, and the tool generates high-fidelity UI designs instantly—no traditional design software required. The platform earned 816 votes on Product Hunt, signaling strong designer interest in AI-powered interface creation.
Stitch works across images, code, and text all in one canvas, letting teams iterate designs through conversation rather than clicking menus. The tool generates instant prototypes, maintains design consistency automatically through built-in design systems, and references DESIGN.md files to keep teams aligned. Voice commands make iteration faster for rapid brainstorming sessions. Designers can go from rough idea to clickable prototype in seconds, then refine using natural language feedback instead of wrestling with design tools.
This matters because UI design traditionally takes days or weeks per screen. Stitch compresses that timeline dramatically while keeping quality high and design systems intact. The tool fits teams juggling multiple projects, startups needing fast iterations, and enterprises wanting faster handoffs between designers and developers. If you’re spending hours on repetitive design work or prototyping variations, Stitch could cut that time by 80 percent. Pricing details aren’t public yet, but Google’s tools typically offer generous free tiers with premium options for teams.
Bottom line: Stitch 2.0 makes high-quality UI design accessible and fast enough that design bottlenecks might finally disappear from product development.
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