Anthropic’s Claude Design aims to democratize visual creation by turning simple prompts into polished designs, accelerating how teams move from ideas to shareable outputs. (Source: Image by RR)

Users Can Export Projects to Canva for Further Editing and Collaboration

Anthropic has introduced Claude Design, a new experimental product that enables users to quickly generate visual assets such as prototypes, presentations, and one-pagers using natural language prompts. The tool, as noted in an article in techcrunch.com, is designed for non-designers, including founders and product managers, allowing them to transform ideas into visual formats without needing traditional design expertise. Users can iteratively refine outputs through follow-up instructions or direct edits, streamlining the creative process.

Rather than positioning itself as a direct competitor to established design platforms like Canva, Anthropic says Claude Design is intended to complement existing tools by accelerating the early stages of ideation. Once visuals are created, users can export them into formats like PDFs, PPTX files, or seamlessly transfer them into Canva for further collaboration and refinement. This workflow emphasizes speed and accessibility over replacing full-featured design environments.

A key feature of Claude Design is its ability to apply a company’s design system automatically by analyzing codebases and design files. This allows teams to maintain visual consistency across projects while supporting multiple design systems within the same organization. The product is powered by Claude Opus 4.7 and is currently available in research preview to paid Claude subscribers, including enterprise users.

The launch underscores Anthropic’s broader push into enterprise and workplace AI tools, as competition intensifies among major players offering productivity-enhancing solutions. Coming alongside other recent releases like Claude Cowork and agentic plug-ins, Claude Design reflects a growing focus on embedding AI into professional workflows. The move also coincides with reports of massive investor interest in Anthropic, highlighting the company’s rising position in the AI industry.

read more at techcrunch.com