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Stop Making Ugly Websites with Claude Code + Stitch 2.0

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If you've been building websites with

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Claude Code lately, you've probably

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noticed something. A lot of them look

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the same. Same hero section, same

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gradients, same floating cards, same

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generic modern startup vibe. You can

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almost tell instantly that AI made it.

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And the thing is, most people blame

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Claude Code for that.

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But here's what's actually happening.

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Most people just ask Claude Code to also

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be their designer. And those are two

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different jobs. So in this video, I want

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to show you the workflow that fixes

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that. Because if I wanted to build a

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beautiful website today, I would not

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start inside Claude Code. I'd start with

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Stitch 2.0 from Google. Then I'd use

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Claude [music] Code to turn that design

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into a real product with polish,

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animation, auth, payments, and

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deployments. That combination is the

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secret sauce. Stitch handles the design

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direction. Claude handles the execution.

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And when you use both properly, your

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website stops looking like AI slop and

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starts looking intentional. So, let's

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get into it. But if you open Claude and

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say,

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"Build me a beautiful landing page." It

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usually gives you something that works,

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but feels generic.

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That's because Claude is strongest when

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it has direction. It needs something

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good to build from. Enter Stitch. Step

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one is simple. Don't start from a blank

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prompt. Start with inspiration. Most

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people skip this.

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They open an AI tool and type, "Build me

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a modern website for my startup." And

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then they're surprised when it looks

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like everyone else's AI website. You

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need references, real references. So

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before I even open Stitch, I go looking

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for websites I actually like.

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I use places like Dribbble, Pinterest,

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or just live websites I think look

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great.

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And I'm not looking for one perfect

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website. I'm looking for pieces. Maybe

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one site has a hero section I love.

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Maybe another has amazing typography.

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Maybe another has a really strong dark

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theme or a cool interactive element.

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That's what you want to collect. Because

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once you do that, you're not asking AI

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to invent taste from nothing.

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You're giving it something strong to

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work from. Then I take a few screenshots

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or grab a website URL and bring that

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into Stitch. Inside Stitch, I can choose

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web, upload my screenshots, and give it

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a simple prompt. One thing to note here,

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your prompt does not need to sound

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robotic or super technical. You can just

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talk normally.

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Something like,

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"Create a premium landing page for my AI

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agency using these references as

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inspiration. [music]

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I like the typography from this one, the

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hero layout from this one, and I want

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the overall site to feel polished,

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modern, and a little interactive.

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Add a headline, CTA, social proof,

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features, testimonials, and a sign-up

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section."

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>> [music]

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>> That's enough to get started. What I

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like about Stitch is that it feels much

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more visual than trying to do design

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inside a coding tool.

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You can see the canvas, generate

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variations, remix sections, and react to

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what you're looking at. That matters

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because good design usually doesn't

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happen on the first try. It happens

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through iteration.

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Maybe version one has the best layout.

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Maybe version two has the best font.

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Version three has the strongest color

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palette. So you combine them. You can

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literally tell Stitch,

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"Use the typography from version two,

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the layout from version one, and the

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visual style from version three." That's

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when the results get better. Now Stitch

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doesn't just generate a page, it starts

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defining the rules behind the page. Your

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colors, your typography, your button

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styles, your spacing, your corner

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radius, your cards, your overall visual

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language. So once Stitch gives me

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something decent, I slow down and refine

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the design system. If the font feels

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generic, I change it. And fonts matter

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way more than people think. A stronger

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heading font alone can make the site

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feel 10 times more premium.

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Another trick I love here is editing

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with screenshots. If a section is close,

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but not quite right, I just take a

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screenshot of that section and tell

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Stitch what to change. "Make this grid

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denser. Add more visual weight here.

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Turn this into something more

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interactive." That feels much more

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natural than trying to describe

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everything from scratch. Now once the

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design looks about 80 to 90% right, I

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bring it into Claude Code. Stitch gives

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you the visual direction, Claude turns

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it into a real product. So I export the

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code or project files from Stitch, open

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them in my IDE, and before I generate

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anything else, I give Claude proper

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instructions.

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I always like having a Claude.md file in

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the project with something like,

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>> [music]

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>> "You are a senior UI designer and

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front-end developer. Preserve the

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imported design

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language, prioritize clean interactions,

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and reusable components. Avoid generic

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layouts, use Tailwind CSS and Shadcn/ui

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where appropriate. That one file changes

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how Claude works because now it has

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standards. It knows this isn't just

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about getting something working, it's

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about making it feel polished." Then

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I'll prompt it with something like,

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"I've created this design in Stitch.

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Turn it into a polished,

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production-ready site.

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Keep the design system intact, use

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Tailwind and Shadcn/ui,

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and run it locally." Now Claude isn't

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guessing what looks good. It already has

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a strong foundation to build from.

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From there, I focus on polish.

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The first thing I usually improve is the

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background. A good background adds depth

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and character.

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Even subtle gradients, glows, or texture

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can make a page feel more complete. Then

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I add motion. Not crazy animations

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everywhere, just subtle stuff. Hover

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effects, smooth section reveals, cards

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lifting slightly, buttons feeling

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responsive.

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That alone makes a site feel much more

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premium. Then I usually revisit

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typography one more time because yes, it

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matters that much.

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And once the front-end feels strong,

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Claude takes over on the product side.

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I'll add auth with Superbase,

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payments with Stripe, email flows with

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something like Resend, and then deploy

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everything with GitHub and Vercel. So

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now it's not just a pretty landing page,

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it's a real working product. Users can

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sign up, log in, pay, and use the app.

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Now if you're building on WordPress

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instead, the same principles apply.

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You'd still want the design first, then

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build and finally convert.

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But you'd also want to think about what

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happens after you ship your design.

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Because a beautiful site that gets

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hacked isn't really that beautiful. For

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WordPress, that means adding a secure

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plugin like MalCare. It handles your

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defense layer so your site stays

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protected after it goes live. You focus

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on building something people want to

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use, MalCare make sure it stays safe

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while they do.

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Now you can convert your Claude design

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into a WordPress theme file and install

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it. And that's it. Stop asking Claude

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Code to be your designer. Use Stitch to

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create the design direction first, then

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use Claude to build, refine, integrate,

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and ship.

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That's how you stop getting generic AI

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websites. That's how you build something

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that actually feels custom.

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That's the workflow. Try it once and

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