Google Stitch: AI Tool to Design UIs & Frontend

Quick Take: Google Labs just unveiled “Stitch,” designed to turbocharge the UI design and development process. The big idea? You feed it prompts or image inputs (like sketches or wireframes), and Stitch, powered by Gemini 2.5 Pro, whips up complex UI designs and the frontend code to match.

Automating Design!

Stitch, this new experiment from Google Labs is all about letting you transform simple inputs – whether that’s a text description or a visual idea – into complex UI designs and the corresponding frontend code. So, what exactly does Stitch bring to the table?

First off, just describe the application you want to build in plain English, throwing in details like desired color palettes or the kind of user experience you’re aiming for. Stitch will then attempt to generate a visual interface tailored to your description.

Second, you can generate UI from images or wireframes by simply uploading them to Stitch. The AI processes the image to produce a corresponding digital UI, effectively bridging your initial visual concepts to a more functional design.

Third, Stitch facilitates rapid iteration and design exploration. It allows you to generate multiple variants of your interface, letting you experiment with different layouts, components, and styles until you land on the look and feel that works for you.

Finally, your generated design can be seamlessly pasted to Figma, making it easy for further refinement, collaboration with design teams, and integration into existing design systems. And perhaps most importantly, Stitch exports clean, functional front-end code based on your design, giving you a fully functional UI ready to be integrated and built upon.

Source: Google

TLDR

Google Labs’ new AI experiment, Stitch, aims to turn your text prompts or image sketches into UI designs and frontend code super fast. Powered by Gemini 2.5 Pro, it helps iterate designs, exports to Figma, and gives you ready-to-use code. Think faster app creation, bridging the design-dev gap.

Try it out!

Tom Furlanis
Researcher. Narrative designer. Wannabe Developer.
Twenty years ago, Tom was coding his 1st web applications in PHP. But then he left it all to pursue studies in humanities. Now, two decades later, empowered by his coding assistants, a degree in AI ethics and a plethora of unrealized dreams, Tom is determined to develop his apps. Developer heaven or bust? Stay tuned to discover!