Launched this week

Clovr
Create beautiful, ready-to-use frontends with AI
75 followers
Create beautiful, ready-to-use frontends with AI
75 followers
Clovr is an AI tool that turns ideas into ready-to-use frontends. Clovr generates clean, structured Next.js code from simple prompts, helping developers and product teams ship faster without boilerplate. You can export the code or open it directly in a GitHub repository to keep building.









What do you think seperates boilerplate and unique, well-made ui? There are obviously so many small points, but what is one big principle?
@peterz_shu The biggest difference is that boilerplate UI just throws components on a page, while great UI is every element placed to guide the user and serve a clear purpose :)
@albychurven Good response :)
How are you thinking about the ownership layer here? With Cursor and Bolt you get code you own - some tools lock you into their renderer. Curious whether this outputs clean editable component code or keeps you in a drag-and-drop environment.
@mykola_kondratiuk Great question, we’re very much on the “you own everything” side. Clovr gives you a full Next.js app that you can export to a GitHub repo so you own the code!
That's exactly what I was hoping to hear — full export to GitHub means no lock-in. For anyone managing AI-native projects, portability is a governance requirement, not just a nice-to-have. Will definitely dig into the export workflow.
@mykola_kondratiuk Sounds good! Thanks man!
Good luck with it - export-first is an underrated differentiator for tools in this space.
BuilderBook
Congrats on the launch Alby and Abdul :) curious, do you guys showcase your favorite frontends generated by Clovr anywhere?
@aridutilh Not right now. But we will soon add a community generated frontends section! A lot of our favourite designs are in the launch video and posted on my X!
Features.Vote
the github export is the right call here. most ai frontend tools make you copy-paste code into your own repo, which means the generated structure is frozen the moment you start editing. giving you an actual repo to clone means the output is designed to be the start of something, not a finished snapshot, and that's a different quality bar entirely.
the tricky part will be the second prompt. the first generation usually looks clean, but when you go back to add a new section or swap out a component, the model doesn't always know what decisions it made before. state management conventions, naming patterns, the way tailwind classes are organized, all of that needs to stay coherent across iterations, not just on the first pass.
@gabrielpineda Yea thanks man! The github export is definitely a big feature! And iteration can be iffy. It's mainly a model issue (which we can't solve), but we're working harder everyday to make it better :)
Just made this on clover in one shot, really great UI
@rahil1202 Looks amazing man! Glad you like it!
unable to signup
@aditya_pratap29 Pretty sure you can? Everyone else has been able to signup.