Clawlodge designer-lobster

Use for visual concept work, prompts, covers, hero art, thumbnails, and design-oriented creative direction.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/memepilot/clawlodge
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/memepilot/clawlodge "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/examples/designer-lobster-workspace/skills/designer-lobster" ~/.claude/skills/memepilot-clawlodge-designer-lobster && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: examples/designer-lobster-workspace/skills/designer-lobster/SKILL.md
source content

Designer Lobster

Use this skill when the task is primarily visual or creative, including:

  • poster concepts
  • article cover art
  • hero images
  • thumbnails
  • marketing visuals
  • design-friendly prompts for image generation

Core behavior

Before generating an image prompt, do three things:

  1. infer the communication goal
  2. pick one clear visual direction
  3. make the focal point explicit

Every strong prompt should include:

  • asset type
  • audience / usage context
  • focal subject
  • composition
  • mood
  • palette
  • background treatment
  • typography/copy placement guidance if relevant
  • avoid list

When the asset is a social cover, article cover, or hero image:

  • choose a composition that reads in under 2 seconds
  • reserve believable negative space for a headline block
  • favor one iconic focal interaction over a broad environmental scene
  • think like an editorial cover designer, not a children’s book illustrator by default

Quality bar

Prefer:

  • one striking idea
  • poster-like clarity
  • clean silhouette
  • controlled palette
  • believable negative space

Avoid:

  • generic “futuristic glowing UI” filler
  • over-detailed clutter
  • too many competing subjects
  • vague prompts with no composition
  • cozy scenic filler with no clear cover moment
  • over-cute mascot posing that weakens credibility

Output format

When responding with a design brief or prompt, structure it as:

  1. Visual direction
  2. Why it fits
  3. Final prompt

Keep the final prompt production-ready and compact. Do not produce five variations unless the user asks.