Google has introduced a new way to design app interfaces using AI, and it focuses on speed, simplicity, and visual clarity. The company calls it “vibe designing,” and it builds on the idea that people can describe what they want and get a working UI without great technical skills. This approach shifts the focus from coding screens to describing goals, user experience, and visual style in plain language.
This matters because many people can now build app layouts without writing code or learning complex design tools. You can type or speak your ideas, and Stitch generates a high-quality interface that you can refine step by step. It also supports quick iteration, so you can test different layouts and flows without starting from scratch every time.
According to Google’s official blog post, Stitch has evolved into an AI-native design canvas that turns natural language into full UI designs. The company also highlights how the tool supports collaboration and rapid prototyping.
“With it, anyone can create, iterate and collaborate to turn natural language into high-fidelity UI designs.”
How Google Stitch works
Stitch lets you describe your app idea using text or voice, and then builds the interface based on that input. You can adjust layouts, colors, and structure while the AI updates everything in real time. The new canvas also accepts images, text, and code as context, which helps shape the final design.
The platform includes multiple AI agents that guide the process, track changes, and help you explore different directions without losing your progress.
One of the key features is the ability to connect screens and preview the full app flow instantly. You can click through your design and see how users move from one screen to another. Stitch also suggests the next screens automatically, which helps map user journeys without manual effort.
This feedback loop speeds up decisions and helps refine the UI quickly.
Voice control and design system support
Stitch also supports voice input, so you can speak directly to the tool and make changes on the fly. You can ask for new layouts, color variations, or design tweaks, and the system responds immediately.
It also includes DESIGN.md support, which lets you export or reuse design systems across projects, saving time when building multiple apps.
Google has released Stitch’s vibe designing feature in an experimental phase, and users can try it through the beta website.