askill
authoring-stitch-prompts

authoring-stitch-promptsSafety 100Repository

Converts natural-language descriptions or UI spec files into optimized Google Stitch prompts. Use when creating, refining, or validating design directives for Google Stitch. Use when user says "create a Stitch prompt", "optimize this for Stitch", "convert this spec to a Stitch prompt", "write a UI prompt", or mentions Google Stitch prompt authoring. Follows Stitch best practices with short, directive prompts focused on screens, structure, and visual hierarchy.

4 stars
1.2k downloads
Updated 2/14/2026

Package Files

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SKILL.md

Authoring Stitch Prompts

Quick Start

  1. Collect context – accept natural language, specs, or referenced files describing the screen/app. 1.5. Discover design context (optional) – check for design-intent/:
    • If exists: Extract Project Type, Design System from design-intent/memory/constitution.md
    • If not found: Scan codebase for framework hints (package.json)
    • Falls back gracefully to standalone mode
    • See WORKFLOW.md for details.
  2. Parse essentials – identify app type, screen focus, layout elements, and visual cues.
  3. Detect split points – analyze if input contains multiple screens or distinct intents (>2). Apply smart defaults: split if >2 screens/intents, else combine. Users can request regeneration with different approach.
  4. Filter aggressively – strip ALL non-UI concerns (backend, auth, APIs, caching, error handling, performance metrics, code-level specs). Focus EXCLUSIVELY on visual layout, components, colors, typography, spacing, and interaction patterns.
  5. Condense – rewrite into one atomic Stitch directive using "Design/Create/Add…" phrasing.
  6. Structure output – follow the Stitch prompt template (directive sentence → bullet list → 3–6 style cues → constraints). If design context was discovered, inject project-appropriate style cues. Do NOT use multi-section headings.
  7. Validate – ensure UI nouns are present, word count <250, NO technical implementation terms, and format matches EXAMPLES.md structure before returning the prompt.

Use this Skill whenever users need Stitch-ready wording, prompt refinements, or style-consistent rewrites.


File Output

Prompts are saved to feature-based directories under design-intent/google-stitch/{feature}/:

  • Feature name derived from screen/page purpose (kebab-case, semantic, concise)
  • Prompt files: prompt-v{version}.md (auto-incremented from existing versions)
  • Pre-created subdirectories: exports/ (Stitch outputs) and wireframes/ (reference mockups)
  • File composition: <!-- Layout: {Name} --> header, then --- separators between component sections (<!-- Component: {Name} -->)
  • 6-prompt Stitch limit: If >6 prompts, split into prompt-v{version}-part{N}.md files (max 6 per part)
  • Copy-paste ready: Entire file works directly in Stitch interface

See WORKFLOW.md for detailed file composition rules, REFERENCE.md for Stitch best practices, and EXAMPLES.md for worked examples (Examples 14–16 cover multi-component and split scenarios).


Input Types

Accepted

  • Natural-language descriptions (single screen or short flows)
  • Markdown/YAML/JSON specs (/specs/dashboard.md)
  • Revision directives ("move KPI cards above chart", "convert to French", "change button to green")
  • References to uploaded wireframes or images
  • Language conversion requests ("switch to Spanish", "German version")
  • Structured input from /prompt command (see below)

Structured Input (from /prompt command)

When invoked via /prompt, the skill may receive pre-parsed preferences (Brief, Components, Style, Structure). Parse structured fields and apply style mappings before proceeding. See WORKFLOW.md for field handling and style mapping tables.

All input detail levels are valid — Stitch infers patterns from minimal descriptions. Use adjectives to convey vibe when details are sparse ("vibrant fitness app", "minimal meditation app").


Workflow Overview

High-level loop: parse → condense → format → validate. Detailed branching logic, including cue extraction and revision handling, lives in WORKFLOW.md.


Output Structure

Prompts must follow the Stitch-friendly template:

  • One-sentence description of the app/screen + primary intent.
  • Bullet list (3–6 items) covering layout, components, or flows.
  • Visual style cues (palette, typography, density, tone).
  • Optional behavior/constraint reminders (responsiveness, export format).

Reference templates/authoring-stitch-prompts-template.md for wording patterns and templates/layout-prompt-template.md for layout/foundation prompts.


Examples

Representative before/after samples (SaaS dashboard, banking app, iterative edits, spec conversions) are in EXAMPLES.md. Use them to mirror tone and formatting; keep this file lean by not re-embedding the full transcripts here.


Design Context Integration

When design-intent/ exists in the project, the skill enhances style cues with project context:

  • Project Type influences tone (e.g., "enterprise-grade" for Enterprise, "friendly, approachable" for Consumer)
  • Design System names appear in style cues (e.g., "Fluent UI styling", "Material Design patterns")

The skill does NOT inject specific tokens (hex colors, spacing values)—only high-level descriptors that help Stitch generate contextually appropriate designs.

Fallback behavior: If design-intent/ is not found, the skill works standalone using default style cues.

See WORKFLOW.md for discovery logic and WORKFLOW.md for injection rules.


MCP Integration (Optional)

When @_davideast/stitch-mcp is configured, prompts can be sent directly to Stitch for generation after authoring.

With MCP: Author prompt -> Generate screens -> Fetch images/code Without MCP: Author prompt -> Copy to Stitch manually

After authoring, offer: "Stitch MCP is available. Generate screens now? [Yes / No / Just save prompts]"

If accepted, invoke the generating-stitch-screens skill with the authored prompt file.


Common Issues

  • Prompts too verbose – Re-run formatting with the template and trim narration. See TROUBLESHOOTING.md.
  • Missing style cues – Derive palette/typography keywords from user input or prior session context before finalizing. See TROUBLESHOOTING.md.
  • Multi-goal briefs – Split into multiple prompts; re-emphasize Stitch's atomic focus. See TROUBLESHOOTING.md.

Reference Files

For advanced usage:

Install

Download ZIP
Requires askill CLI v1.0+

AI Quality Score

88/100Analyzed 2/19/2026

Well-structured, comprehensive skill for authoring Google Stitch prompts. Clear step-by-step Quick Start, detailed file output specs, comprehensive input types, and good design context integration. Highly actionable with templates and examples. Minor deduction for deep nesting and missing icon. References external files that should accompany this skill for full completeness.

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Metadata

Licenseunknown
Version-
Updated2/14/2026
Publisherjoaquimscosta

Tags

github-actionsobservabilitypromptingsecurity