Weave Tools are pre-built AI actions that run directly inside Figma from a new Tools panel, sitting alongside plugins and widgets. Moran, Weave’s designer advocate, built the initial set of 30+ tools, covering things like aspect ratio changes, on-brand icon generation, and logo placement on products. The “add logo to product” demo is a good proxy for what makes this interesting: it’s not a one-shot prompt, but a multi-step chained workflow under the hood, which is why the output actually holds up — logo bending into the fabric wrinkles of a hoodie. All that complexity is hidden.
Figma Community just got a new content type. Alicia Kranjc, Product Manager at Figma, walks through how to publish a Weave workflow to Community so anyone can find, copy, and run it. The demo workflow takes a single image and produces three video hero variations for different websites. Something that took its creator hours to build takes someone else a couple of minutes to use.
Three small connection upgrades in Figma Weave: select many nodes and connect them to one in a single move, hold Shift to fan one node out to many, or double-click a handle to spawn a prompt node already wired in.
Five workflows that show what Figma Weave is actually for: chaining AI nodes on a canvas to blend two references into a style guide, fan out variations across aspect ratios, run eight distortion filters in parallel, generate rotatable 3D models through Rodin 3D V2, and composite stills into rendered video.
Weavy’s CEO Itay Schiff walks through his path from 25 years in high‑end VFX to building Weavy, and why Figma acquired it. Weavy lets you package complex node‑based AI flows into simple apps that 200+ teammates can use, baking in brand rules and references by default. It matters if you care about how Figma will operationalize AI beyond one‑off prompts — this is effectively “internal tools for creatives” hiding behind a friendly app layer.
Dylan Field on the newest addition to Figma’s product line: “Figma has acquired Weavy, a platform that brings generative AI and professional editing tools into the open canvas. As Figma Weave, the company will help build out image, video, animation, motion design, and VFX media generation and editing capability on the Figma platform.”
In A Match Made in Heaven, Weavy’s early investor, Ben Blumenrose from Designer Fund, shared three key features of their product approach that make for a very powerful tool — being model agnostic, exposing process, and working as an aggregator.