Figma pushes repeatable AI media workflows in Weave with 20+ new templates
Original: Learn how Figma Weave can level up your work and explore the 20+ (new!) Community templates View original →
Figma used an April 9 X post to point users to more than 20 new Community templates for Figma Weave, the company's AI-native media workflow product. The post is small on its face, but it signals a practical shift in how Figma wants Weave to be used: not as a one-off prompt toy, but as a repeatable workflow system for teams that need controlled creative output.
In Figma's latest Weave blog post, the company describes Weave as a canvas for creating and editing imagery, video, audio, and 3D by chaining prompts, transformations, and editing steps together. The article walks through five example workflows and says the new template set is meant to help users start from reusable patterns for tasks such as turning images into video, comparing models, or combining reference styles. The product site makes the same positioning clear: multiple AI models and professional editing tools live inside one node-based workflow environment.
This is a more consequential move than a template library might suggest. Generative tools often produce impressive first outputs but struggle when teams need consistent brand language, controlled iteration, and reusable production logic. Figma's answer is to treat prompts as one step inside a broader creative graph. If that workflow can be saved, shared, and adjusted, then the system becomes useful for production rather than only experimentation.
Figma is also using Weave to extend its role beyond interface design. Since acquiring Weavy in 2025, the company has been building toward a platform that covers image, video, motion, and other AI-assisted asset creation. The new workflow article says Figma is working toward deeper integration between Weave and the broader Figma product later this year, which suggests the company sees AI media generation as a core adjacent surface rather than a side experiment.
The X post focuses on templates, but the deeper story is standardization. By packaging repeatable workflows and attaching them to a node-based creative system, Figma is trying to make AI media generation more composable, reviewable, and team-friendly. That is a useful direction for product teams that want more than isolated prompts and prettier demos.
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