AI tool comparison
Figma AI Make Designs from Screenshot vs Lunagraph
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Design & Creative
Figma AI Make Designs from Screenshot
Turn any screenshot into editable Figma components instantly
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Figma AI's new feature converts any screenshot or image into fully editable Figma components, complete with auto-layout, styles, and variable bindings. It uses a fine-tuned vision model trained on Figma's own design system patterns to produce structurally sound output rather than flat recreations. The feature is available inside Figma, requiring no external tool or plugin.
Design Tools
Lunagraph
Design canvas powered by Claude Code — the deliverable is the code
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Lunagraph flips the traditional design-to-code workflow on its head. Instead of designing in Figma and handing off to developers to rebuild in code, Lunagraph is a canvas where designers, product managers, developers, and AI agents all work together — and the output is real HTML, CSS, and React code from the start. What you see on the canvas is literally what ships. Powered by Claude Code, Lunagraph enables cross-functional teams to collaborate without the handoff tax. The design file isn't a blueprint for code — it is the code. Designers can drag and modify components while developers extend them without a translation layer. AI agents can participate in the same canvas alongside humans, making changes that immediately reflect in production-ready output. This approach targets a real coordination cost: the average design-to-engineering handoff introduces bugs, inconsistencies, and days of rework. Lunagraph's bet is that if design and code are the same artifact, that cost disappears. Whether teams will actually adopt a new canvas tool to achieve this is the harder question — but the direction is clearly where the industry is heading.
Reviewer scorecard
“The critical decision here is training on Figma's own design system patterns rather than generic computer vision — that's what separates this from a flat PNG-to-frame trace. The output reportedly respects auto-layout nesting and variable bindings, which means the resulting components are actually editable in the way a designer would have built them, not just visually approximate. My one flag: edge cases where the source screenshot has non-standard layouts or dense data tables will reveal whether the structural inference is genuinely intelligent or just pattern-matching on common UI conventions — and that's where I'd want to see the error states designed with the same care as the happy path.”
“The promise here is concrete: you paste a screenshot of a competitor's UI, a reference from Dribbble, or a whiteboard photo, and you get back a component tree you can actually iterate on — not a flattened image you have to rebuild from scratch. The taste layer is delegated to the user, which is the right call, since nobody wants Figma deciding what their design language should be. The editing surface is the whole product — if the auto-layout comes out wrong or variable bindings are mislabeled, the friction of correcting AI mistakes can exceed the friction of just building it yourself, so the accuracy bar has to be high for this to earn its keep.”
“As someone who's spent years exporting assets and writing specs for engineers, working directly in code-backed components is genuinely exciting. The learning curve is real, but designing in production-quality React beats pixel-pushing by a wide margin.”
“Direct competitors are screenshot-to-code tools like Builder.io's Visual Copilot and Anima, but this is differentiated because it outputs Figma-native structure rather than HTML — that's a real distinction, not a marketing one. The scenario where this breaks is obvious: anything with complex custom components, motion, or non-standard grid logic will produce structurally plausible but semantically wrong output that a designer then has to debug layer by layer. What kills it in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Figma itself shipping a tighter version with better component library awareness, which they will, because this is clearly v1 of a longer roadmap.”
“Every design-to-code tool in the last five years has promised 'what you see is what ships.' They all hit the same wall: real production code has business logic, state management, and edge cases that don't belong in a canvas. Fine for landing pages, limited for anything serious.”
“The job-to-be-done is singular and clear: eliminate the blank-canvas rebuild when a designer needs to start from a reference that exists outside Figma. That's a real, recurring friction point in design workflows, and this tool addresses it without asking the user to configure anything before getting value. The completeness question is whether the output quality is high enough to replace the current solution — which is either tedious manual recreation or a plugin like Magician — and if auto-layout and variable bindings are genuinely correct on average cases, this clears that bar and makes the old tools look like workarounds.”
“Zero-handoff is real engineering value. If designers are working in actual React components, the diff between design and prod collapses. Claude Code as the underlying engine means complex component logic is accessible from the canvas, not just styling tweaks.”
“The convergence of design tools and AI coding agents is inevitable. Lunagraph is early, but a unified surface where humans and agents collaborate on the same code artifact is exactly where this goes. Figma will copy this if Lunagraph doesn't scale first.”
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