Testing Lovart’s Four New Features: Why It’s the Leading AI Design Agent
The author evaluates Lovart’s latest four updates—Brand Kit, Font Generator, Create Skill, and Export PSD—through three real‑world cases, showing how the AI agent ensures brand‑consistent visuals, streamlines design workflows, and enables reusable design assets for both personal and professional projects.
Hello, I’m Lu Gong. Last week I wrote two posts about Vibe Design, but those focused on UI design for coding scenarios. In broader, more general design contexts, Lovart proves to be the best AI agent for the design vertical.
Lovart (https://www.lovart.ai/) is an AI‑powered vertical agent for design. By describing requirements in a conversation, it creates a complete design on an infinite canvas—from logo to color palette to layout—and outputs editable layered files rather than flat images.
As an algorithm engineer and AI full‑stack developer, I’m not strong in design or Photoshop. My public‑account graphics have long been assembled ad‑hoc. With Lovart’s major update, I tested its new features to solve my branding and course‑promotion material needs.
Case 1: Testing Brand Kit with National Geographic’s Brand Manual
I uploaded a PDF of China National Geographic’s brand manual. Lovart automatically parsed the logo, color swatches, and fonts, creating a Brand Kit without manual effort.
Using this Kit, I generated a set of Hangzhou tourism posters that fully adhered to National Geographic’s visual guidelines, ensuring consistent colors, typography, and layout across all assets.
The Kit is project‑level; once attached, every new design in the project follows the same visual standards, and multiple Kits can be managed independently.
Case 2: Building a Brand Kit for My “AI Programming Lab” Public Account
I imported my public‑account’s logo, color scheme, and tone description into Lovart, creating a dedicated Brand Kit.
With the Kit, I quickly produced cover images, article illustrations, and event posters, all automatically following the defined brand assets.
Lovart also offers Export PSD: selecting a design on the canvas and choosing Export PSD downloads a layered .psd file, allowing a Photoshop‑savvy colleague to fine‑tune details while I handle the overall visual framework.
Case 3: From Course Material Design to Skill Reuse
To avoid re‑describing requirements for each new project, I saved a successful design workflow as a Skill using the new Create Skill feature.
I uploaded the Claude Code course outline and logos, let the agent generate the promotional materials, then saved the conversation as the Skill “Brand-Integrated-Course-Branding”.
Later, I reused this Skill for a Vibe Coding course, only swapping the course‑specific content. The resulting materials maintained visual consistency while reflecting each course’s unique details, demonstrating clear efficiency gains.
Font Generator
The Font Generator lets you upload a reference font image or describe a style; within about three minutes Lovart produces a custom font, which is stored in “My Fonts” for future use.
I tested it with my own calligraphic “Lu‑style” font, which integrated seamlessly into the Brand Kit, providing a unique, non‑generic typeface for the brand.
Overall Impression
The four new features—Brand Kit, Font Generator, Create Skill, and Export PSD—address two core challenges: maintaining visual consistency and reusing design workflows.
Brand Kit enforces brand guidelines; Create Skill captures and replays successful design processes; Font Generator supplies exclusive typefaces; Export PSD bridges AI‑generated layouts to professional refinement. Together they form a complete brand‑design workflow, lowering the barrier for non‑designers to produce professional, consistent visuals.
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