SeedFlip gives you curated design seeds β fonts, colors, shadows, the works β applied to a real page in one click. Export as CSS, Tailwind, shadcn/ui, or a complete DESIGN.md your AI agent actually understands. Or plug it straight into your editor with the MCP server.
βConsider me flipped.β
β @nikkimitss, Passive Studios
Works with your stack
βAI gave every developer the power to build. It did not give them the power to design. The code was never the bottleneck. The design was. It still is.β
I described the same design to Claude four different times and got four completely different results. Not one of them looked right. The problem was never my prompting. I didnβt have a design seed. I had adjectives. SeedFlip gave me the actual values. First try. Done.
My cofounder finally said it out loud. βThis looks like every other app on Product Hunt.β He was right. Same zinc palette. Same Inter font. Same everything. Pulled a SeedFlip seed into our Tailwind config and the next build looked like a different company made it.
Iβve shipped six projects and every single one looked like a developer made it. Because one did. Plugged the MCP server into Cursor, told it to pull something editorial and warm. Twenty minutes later I had a product Iβd actually screenshot. No designer. No Figma file. Just the right inputs.
Free gets you flipping. Pro gets you shipping.
104 curated design seeds. Real fonts. Real color theory. AI-ready prompts that actually work. No Figma file. No design committee. No three-week sprint to pick a gray.
SeedFlip gives you curated design systems β fonts, colors, shadows, the works β applied to a real page in one click. Export as CSS, Tailwind, or a complete DESIGN.md your agent actually understands.
βConsider me flipped.β
β @nikkimitss, Passive Studios
Works with your stack
βEvery AI app has the same auth flow, the same Stripe checkout, and the same shadcn components. Design is the last unfair advantage you haven't used yet.β
I was mass-prompting Claude at 4am trying to describe the βvibeβ I wanted. Turns out the vibe was 17 CSS variables I didnβt know existed.
Sent a SeedFlip export to my cofounder. His response was βwhy does our app look like a real company now.β We launched that week.
Tried the βmake my app look like Super Unicorn X, Y, Zβ prompts. Didnβt work. This did. Wish I found it 12 projects ago.
Free gets you flipping. Pro gets you shipping.
104 curated design seeds. Real fonts. Real color theory. AI-ready prompts that actually work. No Figma file. No design committee. No three-week sprint to pick a gray.
Safari is a rebellion against white backgrounds. The sage-olive canvas is the first thing you notice and the last thing you forget. It's not gray. It's not green. It's not beige. It's all three, and it creates a surface that feels alive in a way no white background ever could.
You've looked at your own product and thought "this looks like everything else." That's because you're building on the same white canvas as everyone else.
Safari throws that out. The olive background is a statement. It says your product has opinions. It says the people who built it cared about the environment the interface lives in, not just the components on top of it.
If you're building analytics dashboards, SaaS products, or dev tools that need to feel grounded and real, Safari is the seed. It proves that warm and technical aren't opposites.
IBM Plex Sans at its heaviest weight is a force of nature. On the olive canvas, it lands with authority that lighter fonts can't touch. This is an industrial typeface in a natural environment, and that tension is what makes Safari feel unique. Technical credibility meeting organic warmth.
Body text stays in the same family at regular weight. The extreme weight contrast between heading and body creates a hierarchy that scans instantly. For analytics and dashboard interfaces, that speed matters. Users find the heading, orient themselves, then read the details. The weight difference is the wayfinding system.
Sage-olive is doing something radical. It's replacing white as the default canvas. And because every neutral in the system shares that warm olive undertone, everything feels like it grew from the same soil. The grays aren't gray. They're sage. The borders aren't silver. They're moss.
The orange accent is a hot coal on a mossy forest floor. It's unexpected. It's energetic. And because the entire canvas is muted and organic, that single pop of orange is impossibly vivid. One color against the olive creates more impact than a whole spectrum against white.
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