Reference hunting fills your tabs
Bouncing between overseas sites, Pinterest, and competitor screens — copying images one by one. Copy multiple reference images in sequence and paste them into Figma or docs in order.
Use Case / Designers
Figma, Photoshop, Illustrator, browser references. Generate images, videos, and slides from the corner of your desktop. Copy reference images in sequence and paste them in order. IrukaDark gives the time back to the design itself.
IrukaDark reclaims time spent before and after the creative work: hunting references, gathering assets, generating drafts, and organizing feedback.
Bouncing between overseas sites, Pinterest, and competitor screens — copying images one by one. Copy multiple reference images in sequence and paste them into Figma or docs in order.
Rough ideas, textures, explainer slides, and short reference videos can be generated in the corner of your desktop without opening another tool. Output drops back into Figma or Photoshop.
Overseas design articles, guideline PDFs, and competitor specs — select the part you care about and get key points only, so you stay in the work instead of drifting into reading.
IrukaDark does not ask you to move work into another tool. It appears over Figma and the reference screens you are already using.
@image / @video / @slide
Rough ideas, texture assets, pitch slides, and short explainer videos — all without switching tools. Output drops straight into Figma or any document.
Command + Shift + V
Auto-save up to 1,000 text items and 30 images in clipboard history. Mood boards and Figma-to-docs transfers no longer need round trips of copy and paste.
Option + S / Option + A
Select overseas site layouts, color systems, components, or guideline PDFs. Get a short read of intent, structure, and palette to feed straight into design decisions.
Option + Shift + V / Templates
Delivery emails, feedback responses, file-naming patterns, and frequent reference images — register them as snippets. Save brand guides as templates so you do not have to attach them each time.
From morning research to generation, review, and proposal or delivery, IrukaDark helps throughout the workflow.
Copy multiple reference images from overseas sites and social posts. Select interesting cases and capture the palette and structure briefly.
Use @image and @slide to generate rough ideas, textures, and pitch slides without leaving Figma. Fill the missing assets in place.
Summarize foreign-language reviews and long feedback. See the intent of revision requests and the items that need attention quickly.
Record proposal calls and client interviews without a bot. Notes turn into summary slide images that move sharing and handoff forward.
Here is how IrukaDark's core tools show up in a designer's day-to-day work.
@image, @video, and @slide create rough ideas, textures, explainer slides, and reference videos in the corner of the desktop. Templates store reference images so you do not have to attach them every time.
Auto-save text and image history (up to 1,000 text items and 30 images). Copy multiple reference images in sequence and paste them into Figma or docs in order. Turn frequent assets into snippets.
Select competitor UIs, brand guides, foreign-language articles, or spec PDFs to get explanations in place — intent, structure, and color summarized briefly. Text can also be turned into diagram images.
Polish proposal copy, delivery emails, and foreign-language comments, with in-place replacement when needed. Record design meetings and interviews and turn them into summary slide images.
Common questions when bringing IrukaDark into design workflows.
Start with clipboard history (sequential image copy and paste) and the @image / @slide generation commands. Daily hand motions in Figma and docs drop noticeably.
Yes. Generated images and videos can be pasted straight from the clipboard or saved location into Figma, Photoshop, Illustrator, and any document. Multiple reference images can also be copied in sequence and pasted in order.
Save reference images in the template feature so you do not have to attach them per generation. Tone-and-manner, color rules, and competitor references can all live there.