Claude Design turns Opus 4.7 into a paid-plan design workspace
Original: Introducing Claude Design by Anthropic Labs View original →
Claude Opus 4.7 did not arrive as a coding benchmark story alone. On April 17, Anthropic opened Claude Design as a research preview, turning Claude into a workspace for prototypes, slides, one-pagers, decks, and visual briefs. Access is rolling out to Claude Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise subscribers.
The important shift is that the product is not just prompt-to-image dressed up for workplace use. A user can start from a text prompt, upload images and documents, point Claude at a codebase, or capture elements from an existing website. Claude then creates a first version and lets the user refine it through conversation, inline comments, direct edits, and custom sliders generated for the project.
Anthropic is aiming at the messy middle between idea, mockup, and implementation. During onboarding, Claude can read a team's codebase and design files to build a design system with colors, typography, and components. Future projects can use those rules automatically, and teams can maintain more than one system. If this works in practice, the value is not that Claude produces a pretty first draft. It is that drafts can stay closer to a company's actual product language.
The export path is equally telling. Finished work can be shared as an internal organization URL, saved as a folder, or exported to Canva, PDF, PPTX, or standalone HTML. For engineering handoff, Claude packages the project into a bundle for Claude Code. That makes Claude Design less like a pure Figma rival and more like a bridge between product planning, visual exploration, and agentic implementation.
There are preview-stage constraints. Anthropic says Enterprise organizations have Claude Design off by default, and usage draws from subscription limits unless users continue with additional usage enabled. The strategic signal is still clear: frontier model competition is moving beyond chat and code completions into role-specific work surfaces. Opus 4.7's vision capability will be judged less by a chart than by how much design cleanup and engineering rework remains after a real team uses the handoff.
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