It's Monday.
Here's what changed in AI this week, and what it means for your design work:
🧪 What I'm Building: Behind the Scenes
🚨 Big News: Google's Nano Banana 2 Just Changed AI Image Generation
🤖 Design Inspiration: iOS App Design Prompts
🛠️ Tutorial of the Week: How to Launch Your iOS App in 24 Hours with SuperAppp
💡 Prompt of the Week: Full App Design Mockup
⚙️ AI Tool of the Week: UX Pilot

WHAT I’M BUILDING
Behind the Scenes
Last week was heavily focused on content creation. After seeing the engagement on my first YouTube video, I decided to double down and record a few more while the momentum is there. I also had a lot of short-form videos already scheduled, so the whole week was very content-driven.
In the latest video, I dive deeper into Claude Code and show the full workflow for building a 3D scrolling animation website. The kind of project that would normally take days of work - and a big budget - can now be prototyped incredibly fast with the right tools. It’s honestly mind-blowing.
On the studio side, we also signed a new client for a complete redesign on Framer, and we’re currently in discussions with a very large French company.
Lots of movement, and exciting things ahead.


BIG NEWS
Google's Nano Banana 2 Just Changed AI Image Generation
Google just dropped Nano Banana 2 and it's a big deal for designers.
This is the successor to the original Nano Banana model that went viral, and it's now the default image model across the entire Gemini ecosystem.
That means it's free for everyone in the Gemini app, Search, Lens, AI Studio, and Vertex AI.
What caught my attention
Nano Banana 2 combines the quality of Nano Banana Pro with the speed of Gemini Flash.
With this you get high resolution images generated faster than before, with dramatically better text rendering, subject consistency for up to 5 characters and 14 objects, and native support for multiple aspect ratios.

The text rendering alone is a game changer.
If you've ever tried generating mockups, social media graphics, or infographics with AI and got garbled text, that's largely solved now.
Why it matters
In Google's internal Elo evaluations, Nano Banana 2 outperformed OpenAI's GPT-Image 1.5, ByteDance's Seedream 5.0 Light, and xAI's Grok Imagine Image across visual quality, infographic clarity, and factual accuracy.

The real win
For designers, this means you can generate high quality mockup assets, placeholder images, social graphics, and concept art without paying for a separate image tool.
It's built right into the tools you're probably already using.
The multi language support also means you can generate images with text in any language which is huge for international projects.

DESIGN INSPIRATION
iOS App Design Prompts
Tool Used: SuperAppp

PROMPT: Create a minimal 3D smartphone UI mockup showing a dark-mode fintech banking app interface with soft shadows and rounded corners. The screen displays a section titled “Your Cards” with a floating gradient credit card showing a balance of $3.456 and a small Mastercard logo, rendered in pastel pink, purple, and blue colors. Below the card are color selection circles and a Transactions section, all designed in a modern glassmorphism style. The phone is shown in a close-up angled perspective with a matte black frame on a soft gray studio background, rendered as a high-quality 3D product mockup with realistic lighting and subtle depth of field.Tool Used: Subframe

PROMPT: Create me an ultra realistic 3D render of a premium smartphone showing a futuristic AI fitness dashboard UI, angled 3/4 view, dark glassmorphism interface, midnight blue and purple gradient background, glowing neon UI cards showing heart rate 67 BPM and training 24 days, modern AI activity dashboard, minimal icons, glowing microphone button, realistic reflections, studio lighting, resting on dark stone surface, depth of field, cinematic shadows, Apple-style industrial design, octane render, 8kTool Used: Uizard

PROMPT: Design an iOS app screen for a recipe and meal planning app called "CookCraft". Light mode UI with a warm off-white background (#FAF8F5). The top section shows a large hero card with a beautifully photographed pasta dish, rounded corners (20px), and a subtle warm shadow. Overlaid on the bottom of the image card is a frosted glass banner showing "Creamy Tuscan Pasta" in bold dark text, a row of small icons for prep time (25 min), servings (4), and difficulty (Easy), and a red heart bookmark icon in the top right corner. Below the hero card, display a "Today's Plan" section with three horizontal meal cards (Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner) each showing a small circular food thumbnail on the left, meal name and calorie count on the right, with thin divider lines between them. A floating action button in warm terracotta orange (#E07A5F) with a plus icon sits in the bottom right. Standard iOS tab bar at the bottom with Discover, Meal Plan, Grocery List, and Profile tabs. Clean, editorial typography using SF Pro with generous whitespace and a lifestyle magazine aesthetic. iPhone 15 Pro frame.
TUTORIAL OF THE WEEK
How to Launch Your iOS App in 24 Hours with SuperAppp

Ever had an app idea but thought you needed months of development and thousands of dollars to make it real?
This tutorial breaks down how to go from a rough sketch to a published App Store app in a single day using FigJam, Figma, and SuperAppp.
Step 1: Map Your User Flows
Open FigJam and create a new board
Map out the path your user should take through the app, from opening it to completing their main goal
Draw a quick sketch for each screen, just boxes and arrows showing the flow

Step 2: Design the App Screens
Copy your sketches from FigJam and paste them into Figma
Start designing the final screens based on your rough sketches
Use design references to help define the visual direction, look at apps you admire for inspiration on layout, typography, and color

Step 3: Build the Backend with AI
Head over to SuperAppp and paste your Figma link
The AI will automatically convert your designs into real SwiftUI components
Review the generated components and make sure they match your vision

Step 4: Add Integrations
Use SuperApp's chat interface to add a backend to your app
Connect a database (SuperApp uses Supabase under the hood)
Set up user authentication: login, signup, password reset etc

Step 5: Test and Publish
Take time to test every flow in your app thoroughly
Iterate with the AI if you spot anything that needs changes (just describe what's wrong)
Once you're happy, hit publish and SuperApp will guide you through the App Store submission process


PROMPT OF THE WEEK

PROMPT: Design a complete iOS mobile app UI kit presentation for an AI-powered travel planner app called "Roamly". Create a grid layout showing 8-10 different screens on a neutral gray background. Use a premium dark theme with rich dark navy (#0B1120) backgrounds and warm sunset orange (#FF6B35) as the primary accent color with soft gold (#FFB347) as a secondary highlight. Screens to include: (1) App Store screenshot with hero text "Plan Less. Explore More." and a phone mockup showing a trip itinerary overlaid on a blurred travel photo, (2) Onboarding screen with three feature cards — AI itinerary builder, smart packing lists, local hidden gems — and a "Start Planning" CTA button in sunset orange, (3) Trip dashboard showing an upcoming trip to "Tokyo, Japan" with a countdown (12 days), a horizontal day-by-day tab selector, and a vertical timeline of activities for Day 1 with time slots, location pins, and small thumbnail photos for each stop, (4) AI chat screen where the user asks "Plan a 5-day trip to Lisbon for two, we love street food and architecture" and the AI responds with a structured day-by-day outline with estimated costs and a "Generate Full Itinerary" button, (5) Map view screen with a dark-styled map showing numbered pins for each itinerary stop connected by a dotted route line, a bottom sheet card previewing the selected location with photo, rating, hours, and a "Navigate" button, (6) Packing list screen with smart categorized sections — Essentials, Clothing, Tech, Documents — each with checkboxes, item names, and a weather forecast banner at the top showing "Tokyo: 18°C, Light Rain" with a suggestion to pack an umbrella, (7) Explore screen with a "Hidden Gems" header, horizontal scrollable cards showing local recommendations with large photos, place names, distance, and star ratings, filtered by Food, Culture, Nature, and Nightlife tabs, (8) Budget tracker screen with a donut chart showing spending by category (Flights, Hotels, Food, Activities, Transport), total budget vs spent progress bar, and a list of recent expenses with icons and amounts. All screens should use SF Pro typography, consistent 8px grid spacing, subtle card shadows with elevated dark surfaces (#1A2235), iOS-standard status bar (9:41, signal, wifi, battery), and follow Apple Human Interface Guidelines. Render each screen in realistic iPhone 15 Pro frames with titanium bezels arranged in a clean 2-row presentation layout. The overall aesthetic should feel like a premium travel brand — adventurous, warm, and polished.
TOOL OF THE WEEK
If you've ever spent hours going from a blank canvas to wireframes, UX Pilot is about to save you serious time.
UX Pilot is an AI powered design platform that generates wireframes, high fidelity UI screens, and complete user flows all from a text prompt.
Describe what you need, and it builds it in seconds.
But here's what makes it different from other AI design tools:
it actually understands UX, it generates screens that make sense from a usability standpoint.
👉 Here's a demo of UX Pilot
🧠 How I'd use it
I'd use UX Pilot to:
Rapidly generate wireframe concepts for client presentations
Create high fidelity mockups for landing pages and app screens when I need to move fast on a deadline
Use the predictive heatmap feature to validate where users will focus before running actual usability tests
💡 Bonus Prompt
Use this prompt in UX Pilot to generate a complete SaaS dashboard:
PROMPT: Design a modern SaaS analytics dashboard for a social media management platform. The layout should use a left sidebar navigation with icons and labels for Dashboard, Campaigns, Content Calendar, Analytics, Audience, and Settings. The main content area features a top bar with a search field, notification bell, and user avatar. Below that, show a row of four KPI metric cards displaying Total Followers (247K, up 12%), Engagement Rate (4.8%, up 0.3%), Posts This Week (23), and Scheduled Posts (8). The main section contains a large area chart showing follower growth over 6 months in a blue-to-purple gradient fill, with hover tooltips showing exact values. Below the chart, place a two-column layout: left column shows "Top Performing Posts" as a list with thumbnail, caption preview, and engagement metrics; right column shows "Audience Demographics" with horizontal bar charts for age ranges and a small donut chart for platform distribution. Use a clean white background with subtle gray (#F5F5F7) section dividers, Inter or SF Pro font family, blue (#4F46E5) as the primary action color, and consistent 16px padding throughout. The design should feel professional, data-rich but not cluttered, with clear visual hierarchy and ample whitespace.
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.net to join.
See you next Monday,
— Adrien


Adrien Ninet
