You’ve seen the noise. The flood of AI-generated images that look impressive at first glance but fall apart when you need to actually use them in a production pipeline. The random artifacts, the lack of consistency, the inability to just move that one element three pixels to the left. For a creative professional—whether a photographer, art director, game developer, or graphic designer—randomness is not a strategy. It is not enough to type a prompt and... read more ›
Dec
09
Dec
02
If you’ve been following the creative landscape lately, you know the noise level is at an all-time high. We are drowning in tools. You’ve got Midjourney for images, Runway for video, obscure GitHub repos for upscaling, and a dozen other browser tabs open just to get one asset out the door. That’s why Weavy (recently acquired by Figma and transitioning to "Figma Weave") has caught my attention. It’s not just another "magic button" generator. It’s... read more ›
Nov
20
The first wave of generative AI was a slot machine. You’d type a prompt into a chat box, pull the lever, and hope for a jackpot. It was novel, and sometimes you’d get lucky. But for professional work, "getting lucky" isn't a strategy. Creative direction demands precision, iteration, and control—three things the chatbot model fundamentally lacks. Regenerating an entire image just to change the lighting is inefficient and unpredictable. It breaks the creative flow and... read more ›
Nov
20
Right now, we are seeing a massive shift in how that work gets done. For thirty years, we lived in the era of layers: Photoshop, After Effects, Premiere, etc. But the era of Layers is ending, and we're entering the era of Nodes. Currently, two dominant platforms are competing for this new space: Weavy (a polished SaaS app) and ComfyUI (a free, open-source app that runs locally). Which is better for you? Let's find out. Creating an... read more ›
Nov
20
The first wave of AI image generation was like a slot machine. You’d feed a prompt into a chat box, pull the lever, and hope for the best. It was fun, novel, and occasionally useful, but it was a clumsy fit for a professional creative workflow. The lack of precise control, the inability to iterate on specific parts of an image without rerolling the entire thing, and the constant app-switching created a massive tax on... read more ›








