I wanted to experiment with how easy it is to use Framer Agents on their own to build a fully functioning landing page from a simple starting point. The goal was to push beyond assisted edits and see how far a single prompt-driven workflow could take a real idea - from structure to interaction - without manually designing each layer.
I started with something intentionally minimal: a 3-item CMS collection of Boba drinks. From there, I prompted the Agent to generate a complete landing page around it, including an interactive carousel to switch between flavours.
Part of the reason for doing this was to test how I might actually use Agents in a day-to-day workflow - not as a one-off experiment, but as something that could realistically speed up how I build, iterate, and polish pages in a real project environment.
What stood out most was how easily motion and animation were handled. Instead of manually configuring transitions or interaction logic, I was able to describe what I wanted in prompts, and the Agent translated that into smooth, working animations inside the carousel.
The result is intentionally a fairly simple design, but that was part of the point. It was never about complexity - it was about demonstrating how, in roughly an hour, you can go from a blank canvas to a fully functioning, interactive page.
Even with minimal structure, it shows how powerful Framer Agents can be in turning a simple idea into a real, working experience through prompting alone.
I wanted to experiment with how easy it is to use Framer Agents on their own to build a fully functioning landing page from a simple starting point. The goal was to push beyond assisted edits and see how far a single prompt-driven workflow could take a real idea - from structure to interaction - without manually designing each layer.
I started with something intentionally minimal: a 3-item CMS collection of Boba drinks. From there, I prompted the Agent to generate a complete landing page around it, including an interactive carousel to switch between flavours.
Part of the reason for doing this was to test how I might actually use Agents in a day-to-day workflow - not as a one-off experiment, but as something that could realistically speed up how I build, iterate, and polish pages in a real project environment.
What stood out most was how easily motion and animation were handled. Instead of manually configuring transitions or interaction logic, I was able to describe what I wanted in prompts, and the Agent translated that into smooth, working animations inside the carousel.
The result is intentionally a fairly simple design, but that was part of the point. It was never about complexity - it was about demonstrating how, in roughly an hour, you can go from a blank canvas to a fully functioning, interactive page.
Even with minimal structure, it shows how powerful Framer Agents can be in turning a simple idea into a real, working experience through prompting alone.