Happy Monday, creative family, and welcome to Logiaweb Weekly.

This week’s design intelligence briefing reveals:

  • 🧪 What I'm Building: Behind the Scenes

  • 🚨 Big News: Adobe Just Dropped AI Tools That Actually Change How We Edit Video

  • 🤖 Design Inspiration: High end minimalist product

  • 🛠️ Tutorial of the Week: Create Animated Bento Sections in 2 Minutes

  • 💡 Prompt of the Week: Kling AI

  • ⚙️ AI Tool of the Week: Unicorn Studio

WHAT I’M BUILDING

Behind the Scenes

This week was a big milestone: I officially announced the release of my first SaaS.

I’ve been building it with my COO, Miles, who did an incredible job bringing everything together. The product is called Limora AI: an asset engine made specifically for web designers.

The idea came from a frustration I’ve had for years: spending endless hours searching for the right icons, illustrations, or images. With Limora, you can generate personalized assets in minutes. We spent a lot of time on prompt engineering to make sure the outputs are actually usable in real projects.

Seeing the first users try the tool, share feedback, and create amazing visuals with it has been incredibly rewarding.

It’s just the beginning, and I’m excited to see where Limora goes this year.

BIG NEWS

Adobe Just Dropped AI Tools That Actually Change How We Edit Video

Adobe just released Premiere Pro & After Effects 26.0, and this isn't your typical update. They've added AI powered features that genuinely cut hours off your workflow.

What caught my attention

The headline feature is Object Mask in Premiere Pro. You hover over any object in your footage, click, and the AI generates a precise mask in seconds.

The on device AI model detects and tracks complex moving subjects automatically. It gives you colored visual overlays, lasso and rectangular editing tools, plus feathering controls. This used to take a while to do, and now you can do it automatically in seconds.

And the redesigned Shape Masks now track up to 20x faster than before, with bidirectional tracking and 3D perspective tracking for surfaces and rotating objects.

Why it matters

If you've ever avoided video because masking takes forever, that excuse just disappeared.

After Effects got its own upgrades too. You can now import SVG files as native shape layers with preserved gradients and transparency.

The 3D Parametric Meshes feature lets you create and customize cubes, spheres, cylinders, cones, and more with proper spot and parallel shadows. And with access to 1,300+ free Substance 3D materials, you can make things look photorealistic without even leaving the app.

Variable font animation is finally here too. You can animate up to eight font axes, weight, width, and slant with keyframes and expressions.

Why it matters

Figma’s basically saying, "stop breaking your flow."

You sketch something messy, drop in some reference images, write a quick note, and the AI interprets it all to generate actual design components.

No more exporting concepts, opening a new file, starting from scratch. It's all happening in one place, and the AI bridges the gap between your rough thinking and polished output.

The real win

Adobe is removing the friction that makes video feel like a chore for designers.

Most of us came from static design and only touch video when we have to. These updates make motion work feel less like learning a new profession and more like an extension of what we already do.

The Object Mask alone is worth the upgrade. But combined with native SVG import, parametric 3D, and variable font animation, this update actually makes After Effects feel like a modern tool again.

If you've been avoiding motion design because the learning curve felt too steep, this is the update that changes it. The AI handles the tedious parts, and you focus on the creative decisions.

DESIGN INSPIRATION

High End Minimalist Product Images

Tool Used: 3D AI Studio

PROMPT: A photorealistic architectural visualization of a modern Scandinavian forest cabin, centered in the frame and surrounded by tall pine trees. The house is a two-story minimalist structure with clean rectangular geometry and a flat roof. The exterior façade is clad in light, natural vertical wooden panels with a soft weathered texture, blending harmoniously with the forest environment.

Large floor-to-ceiling glass windows dominate both levels of the house, creating strong transparency and reflections of the surrounding trees. The upper floor features a long balcony with a slim metal railing, extending across the width of the building. A simple wooden chair and small table are placed on the balcony, suggesting quiet, lived-in comfort.

The ground floor opens onto a modest outdoor patio with minimal furniture, visible through the glass. A narrow dirt path leads from the foreground directly toward the house, cutting through lush green moss, grass, and low forest plants. Sunlight filters softly through the trees, casting dappled shadows across the ground and the façade.

The scene is calm, serene, and cinematic, capturing Nordic minimalism, sustainable architecture, and a deep connection to nature. Natural color grading, soft contrast, and realistic global illumination emphasize the peaceful woodland atmosphere.

Ultra-high resolution, photorealistic, architectural photography style, no people, no vehicles, no urban elements.

Tool Used: Meshy AI

PROMPT: A minimalist commercial product photography shot of a single vanilla protein drink carton standing upright, centered in frame. The carton is white with bold red typographic branding repeating vertically, reading “NOON” in large block letters. The front label includes blue text reading “Creamy Vanilla” and smaller black text “with real milk & oats.” A realistic vanilla flower with vanilla pods and a splash of creamy milk is printed on the front of the carton.

The carton has a white bendable plastic straw attached at the top, angled slightly to the left. The product sits on a smooth, matte surface with a subtle shadow beneath it.

Background is a seamless studio setup with a vibrant cobalt blue gradient, transitioning softly from darker blue at the edges to lighter blue behind the product, creating a halo effect. Lighting is clean, soft, and diffused, with professional studio illumination emphasizing sharp edges, crisp typography, and a premium finish.

Ultra-high resolution, photorealistic, commercial advertising style, modern FMCG branding, minimal composition, bold color contrast, shallow depth of field, sharp focus on product, no clutter, no people.

Tool Used: Dora

PROMPT: A high-end minimalist product photography render of a modern cylindrical electronic device, likely a smart speaker or air purifier, standing upright and centered in the frame. The device features a smooth matte black anodized aluminum body with softly rounded vertical edges. Two opposing vertical panels are covered with fine ribbed grille textures, evenly spaced and precision-machined, giving a premium industrial aesthetic.

The top surface is circular and flat with a slightly recessed center disc, surrounded by a subtle concentric vent pattern, suggesting airflow or acoustic output. The top plate has a satin black finish with clean edges and no visible branding. A small, discreet dual-sensor or port detail is visible on the front center of the body, minimal and flush with the surface.

The object is photographed against a seamless pure white studio background, with soft, diffused lighting from both sides to highlight curvature, texture, and material quality. Shadows are minimal and controlled, falling gently beneath the product to maintain a floating, gallery-like presentation.

Ultra-sharp focus, photorealistic, studio product render, luxury consumer electronics style, Scandinavian industrial design, minimalism, precision engineering, high contrast between matte and satin surfaces, no logos, no text, no clutter.

TUTORIAL OF THE WEEK

Create Animated Bento Sections in 2 Minutes

Stop building static Bento grids and let me show you how to create animated icon sections that actually move, without touching code.

Step 1: Generate Your Icons in Higgsfield AI

  1. Go to Higgsfield and write a detailed prompt for the icons you want.

  2. Choose a 1:1 ratio for clean square icons.

  3. Select the Nano Banana Pro model and click Generate.

Pro Tip: Use detailed prompts that specify style, color palette, and visual consistency. The more specific you are, the more cohesive your icon set will look.

Step 2: Create All Your Icons

  1. Follow the same workflow for each icon in your set.

  2. Keep the style consistent by using a similar prompt structure.

  3. Download all your icons once you're happy with them.

Step 3: Build Your Bento Grid in Figma

  1. Open Figma and create your Bento grid layout.

  2. Drop in your generated icons.

  3. Arrange them in an asymmetric grid pattern with varied cell sizes.

Step 4: Animate Icons with Kling AI

This is where it gets interesting:

  1. Take your static icons and upload them to Kling AI.

  2. Use the image-to-video feature to add subtle motion to each icon.

  3. Keep the animations simple, like gentle floating, pulsing, or rotating motions.

Step 5: Add to Your Figma Prototype

  1. Export your animated icons as video files or GIFs.

  2. Add them to your Figma prototype using video fills.

  3. Connect the frames to create an interactive experience.

What used to require After Effects or Lottie animations now happens in one streamlined workflow. With this you can go from prompt to animated prototype without touching a timeline.

If your Bento sections feel flat, give this a shot. It makes everything feel more polished.

PROMPT OF THE WEEK

PROMPT: Ultra-realistic 3D product render of a minimalist silver bell, perfectly centered, made of brushed stainless steel with soft radial grain texture, smooth matte-metal finish, subtle micro-scratches visible under light. The bell has a rounded dome shape with a small circular loop handle on top, precise industrial design, seamless edges, and flawless symmetry.

Studio lighting setup with soft diffused key light from the upper left, gentle rim light defining the silhouette, realistic metallic reflections without harsh glare.

Neutral dark gray gradient background with slight vignette, shallow depth of field, cinematic mood.

Photorealistic materials, physically based rendering (PBR), global illumination, ray-traced reflections, high dynamic range lighting.

Shot as a premium product photograph, sharp focus, ultra-high resolution, clean composition, no branding, no text, no fingerprints.

8K render, Octane/Arnold style, professional studio product photography, hyper-realistic, modern, elegant

TOOL OF THE WEEK

Most websites feel flat. Same layouts, same scroll effects, same energy. Unicorn Studio changes that by letting you build interactive WebGL scenes without writing code.

You layer images, shapes, video, and text, then stack 60+ effects with motion and interactions driven by scroll, hover, or custom triggers. The result is web experiences that feel like they belong in a product showcase, not a template.

🧠How I'd use it

I'd use Unicorn Studio to:

  • Build hero sections that actually stop the scroll with organic 3D motion and depth

  • Create interactive product visualizations where users can explore features through hover and scroll interactions

  • Design portfolio pieces that demonstrate motion design skills without shipping actual code

  • Prototype client concepts that feel finished before development even starts

The learning curve is surprisingly gentle if you understand layers. Think of it like Photoshop met After Effects and decided to live in your browser.

Build a designer-focused AI workflow accelerator that helps web designers plan, design, and launch better websites faster by generating clear step-by-step workflows from idea or client brief to launch, including research, positioning, website structure, copy guidance, visual direction, and AI tool recommendations, tailored to the designer's skill level (beginner, intermediate, advanced), with GPT-5 assisting in breaking down tasks, reducing overwhelm, and improving quality and efficiency, all inside a clean, modern, designer-friendly interface.

That’s it for this week, but I want to make each edition even better.

👉 Got 30 seconds?
Fill out this quick survey and tell me what you'd love to see next. Your feedback directly shapes the next drop.

💌 Know a designer who should be using AI smarter?
Forward them this email. Or just send them to logiaweb.com/weekly to join.

See you next Monday,
— Adrien

Adrien Ninet

say hi on X, Instagram, or YouTube

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