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Freepik Spaces adds a 5-step logo-to-UI workflow with Kling 3.0 loop animation

A shared Freepik Space turns four text inputs into a logo, button system, UI kit, and looping animation, with adjacent one-image-to-website demos on phone. Duplicate the Space if you want a faster brand prototype pipeline.

2 min read
Freepik Spaces adds a 5-step logo-to-UI workflow with Kling 3.0 loop animation
Freepik Spaces adds a 5-step logo-to-UI workflow with Kling 3.0 loop animation

TL;DR

  • Freepik Spaces now has a shareable workflow where four text inputs — brand name, style, object, and palette — feed a node graph that generates a logo, expands it into UI elements, and ends in a looping animation, according to the workflow post.
  • In the full thread, the step-by-step breakdown shows a five-stage pipeline: text-variable setup, logo generation with Nano Banana Pro 2, button creation, UI kit assembly, and a Kling 3.0 infinite loop pass.
  • Separate creator demos from Amir Mushich's post and its companion tweet suggest the same broader pattern is spilling into lightweight web prototyping: a single Nano Banana image can become a browsable website mockup on phone.

What the Space actually does

The core idea is speed. In the original demo, the creator says the pipeline takes about six minutes and starts from just four text nodes wired into an image node powered by Nano Banana Pro 2. The attached clips show those variables feeding a logo generator, then a second pass that turns the logo into a button system before the workflow expands into a fuller UI kit UI kit build.

The thread adds the concrete handoff points. The breakdown says Step 2 uses another Nano Banana node to add depth by converting the logo into a button, Step 3 combines that button with the original brand variables to generate the UI kit, and Step 4 sends start and end frames into a Kling 3.0 node for a clean infinite loop. The same post also includes a duplicable Freepik Space via the shared Space.

Where creators are taking it next

The adjacent experiments are less documented but point in the same direction: brand asset generation is quickly collapsing into prototype generation. In the phone clip, Amir Mushich shows an AI-made visual turned into something interactive enough to browse on iPhone, and his companion post frames it as a full website made from one Nano Banana image with no web background.

A follow-up clip in the fashion example pushes that toward ecommerce-style layouts, with a phone-scrolled clothing site and “AI generated” transitions. Taken together, the stronger evidence is still the Freepik Space itself; the website examples are a creator proof-of-concept, not a documented product workflow.

Further reading

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