Lovable, Vercel & Anthropic: A New Era of Design Tooling enabled by AI
Jun 30, 2025
The way designers work is changing fast. As the line between design and code begins to dissolve, new tools are emerging that are reshaping workflows, roles, and expectations. At Hatch Conference 2025, we’re bringing together leaders from Vercel, Lovable, and Anthropic to explore what this shift means—and what comes next for those building and using the tools that define the future of design.

In the past, the work of a designer often lived inside neatly framed rectangles—artboards, wireframes, prototypes. We created specs, handed them off, and hoped for the best. But that model is being rapidly replaced by something far more fluid, dynamic, and embedded.
The way we design is changing. The tools we use are evolving. And with them, the very definition of design work is being rewritten.
At Hatch Conference this year, we’re hosting a conversation that feels long overdue: a deep, honest discussion about the future of design tooling, and how the gap between design and code is finally closing.
But this is not your typical panel.
We’ve all seen those sessions—broad topic, shallow takes, panelists who aren’t close enough to the problem. We wanted to do something different. Something that reflects what Hatch has always aimed to be: relevant, specific, and built around real expertise.
That’s why we’re bringing together voices from three of the most forward-thinking teams in the design and tech space:
Mamuso (Manuel Muñoz Solera), VP of Design at V0 by Vercel
Nad Chishtie, Head of Design at Lovable
Jenny Wen, Lead Designer at Anthropic and former Director of Design at Figma
The conversation will be moderated by Amber Cartwright, VP of Design at GetYourGuide, whose background in strategic design leadership ensures we won’t stay at the surface. Amber will guide the panel through the complex shifts happening in design tooling and workflow—from AI integration and live code collaboration, to what it means for design systems, roles, and team structure.
These are not passive observers of the space. They’re the ones building the tools that are already reshaping the way we work. Tools that go beyond drawing boxes to ones that understand, generate, and even deploy. And this is a rare opportunity to hear them speak together on what’s coming next.
We’ll ask:
How is the workflow changing when design outputs are no longer static?
What happens when the tool is no longer neutral, but intelligent and collaborative?
What skills should today’s designers be focusing on to stay effective tomorrow?
This panel is not about speculation. It’s about clarity. If you’ve been feeling the shift and wondering how to respond—this is the conversation to help you understand it better.
Join us in Berlin, September 10 to 12, at Hatch Conference.
This is not just a session. It’s a glimpse into where our work is headed.