Artifold /craft — design comparison
Same prompt. Different output.
The /craft skill (a Claude Code skill bundled with Artifold) reads your library, picks
a deliberately different design direction, and applies 12 cited design principles + a 15-item
anti-slop checklist. Below: four prompts, each generated twice by the same model — once
plainly, once via /craft. Click any thumbnail to view the full artifact.
30-day strength tracker for a beginner
"Daily exercise plan with sets, reps, weight progression, and rest periods. Printable, scannable."
Comparing three SF apartments
"989 20th vs 400 Beale vs NEMA — for a couple deciding between them. Compare commute, sun, amenities, vibe, price."
How transformers work
"Explainer for someone who understands LSTMs but hasn't studied attention. Covers QKV, multi-head, positional encoding, scaling."
SF coffee shop tier list
"S/A/B/C tiers of 10 SF coffee shops, ranked by pour-over quality, ambience, and seating."
What's happening here. Both columns came from claude-opus-4-7, same
prompt, same day. The right column went through the /craft skill, which: (1) reads
the user's existing Artifold library to see overused patterns, (2) deliberately picks a
different direction, and (3) applies 12 design principles distilled from Refactoring UI,
Linear, and Vercel/Geist — while actively avoiding 15 specific AI-slop signatures.
The library here had 17 mostly dark / glassmorphic / gradient-heavy artifacts. All four
/craft outputs independently chose editorial / newsprint / cream-paper directions
as the "deliberate opposite." Different model runs would pick differently — the point is that
the library is the input, and each new artifact reads like it belongs to a portfolio of
distinct work, not 20 variations of one template.
Artifold on GitHub →
pipx install artifold