Figma, the design platform, announced today that it has purchased Weavy, a company specializing in AI-driven image and video creation. The team will now operate under the new name Figma Weave.
According to Figma, 20 members from Weavy will be joining their ranks, though the financial details of the acquisition remain undisclosed. Weavy, which is based in Tel Aviv, was established in 2024 and secured $4 million in seed funding this June, led by Entrée Capital and supported by Designer Fund, Founder Collective, and Fiverr’s founder Micha Kaufman.
For now, Weavy will continue to operate independently, but Figma plans to eventually merge it into the Figma Weave brand and integrate it with the broader Figma suite.
Weavy’s online tools let users blend multiple AI models and provide advanced editing features, enabling the creation of polished images and videos suitable for product prototypes or branding. Users can refine these creations by editing layers, tweaking lighting, and modifying colors and angles through prompts to achieve their desired outcome.
 Image Credits:Figma
 
  Image Credits:Figma 
  Users begin by entering a prompt for image creation on an endless canvas, review outputs from several models, select an image, then add another prompt to generate a video, and compare results from different models. At any stage, editing tools are available to alter the video’s appearance. Designers can also merge various prompts and models to achieve their preferred results.
The company provides several models for video, including Seedance, Sora, and Veo, and for images, options like Flux, Ideogram, Nano Banana, and Seedream.
 Image Credits:Figma
 
  Image Credits:Figma 
  “This node-based workflow introduces a new standard of precision and flexibility to AI content creation. Results can be split, reworked, and enhanced, allowing for creative discovery alongside iterative refinement. The Weavy team has impressed us with their ability to balance ease of use, accessibility, and robust features. They’ve built a tool that’s genuinely enjoyable to work with,” stated Figma CEO Dylan Field.
There is growing interest in AI-driven design tools that streamline media creation and design processes. Earlier this month, Perplexity, an AI search company, acquired the team behind Visual Electric, a design platform backed by Sequoia. In April, Krea revealed it had raised $83 million in funding from investors such as Bain Capital, a16z, and Abstract Ventures.












