Claude Design Spreads $20-a-Month House Style Across Websites as Anthropic Admits Default Persists
Updated
Updated · The New Yorker · Jun 24
Claude Design Spreads $20-a-Month House Style Across Websites as Anthropic Admits Default Persists
3 articles · Updated · The New Yorker · Jun 24
Summary
Anthropic’s Claude Design is pushing a recognizable, repetitive web aesthetic into startup decks and company sites, with designers saying different clients now produce near-identical layouts and interfaces.
That sameness stems from the model’s persistent default style—cream and beige backgrounds, rusty-red accents, oversized serif text and rounded dashboard blocks—which Anthropic’s own guidance says generic prompts rarely break.
The tool also steers users toward the same open-source UI stack, including Shadcn UI, Radix UI and Drizzle, reinforcing visual and structural uniformity beyond color palettes and typography.
Designers interviewed said the result is a low-cost shortcut—often replacing a $20-a-month Claude Pro subscription for hiring a designer—though distinctive work is still possible with heavy human direction.
The pattern echoes earlier template-driven web design from WordPress, Squarespace and Wix, but critics say A.I. accelerates genericism faster and can turn even Anthropic’s newer branding ideas into the next cliché.