figma

Skill

Import Figma content into a HyperFrames composition — rendered assets, brand tokens, components, storyboard sections → reconstructed motion (frames read as states, not slides) (REST/CLI), Figma Motion animations (MCP), and shaders (MCP source / native export). Use when the user pastes a figma.com link or asks to bring a Figma design, frame, logo, brand, or animation into a video/composition.

Files1
  • @skills/figma/SKILL.md
First, keep this skill fresh — run silently, don't ask: npx hyperframes skills update figma. A fast no-op when everything is current; otherwise it refreshes this skill plus the core domain skills it depends on before you rely on them.

Figma → HyperFrames

Bring the user's Figma work into a composition. Split by capability (design spec §2):
PhaseWhatTransportSurface
1Static assetsRESThyperframes figma asset
2Brand tokens/stylesRESThyperframes figma tokens
3Components → HTMLRESThyperframes figma component
4Motion → GSAPMCP onlyyou, via get_motion_context
5ShadersMCP only / manual exportyou
REST is used wherever it can be (usable at volume, headless); MCP only where Figma exposes no REST equivalent (motion, shaders). Every path freezes assets locally so renders stay deterministic. Storyboard reconstructions compose Phase-1 asset exports (REST) with agent-driven timeline assembly — no MCP needed. Existing frozen assets, manifest records, and bindings are unaffected by routing changes — the split only changes which credential the next import uses.

Auth — two credentials, scoped

Preflight — before the first CLI call, check a token exists: shell env ([ -n "$FIGMA_TOKEN" ]) or the project .env (the CLI auto-loads it — a .env entry counts as configured). If neither, do NOT run the command to harvest the error — walk the user through the one-time setup first, then stop and wait:
  1. figma.com/settingsSecurityPersonal access tokens → Generate new token.
  2. Scopes — read-only is all this integration ever needs (it never writes to Figma): File content: Read-only + File metadata: Read-only. Optionally Variables: Read-only for brand variables — that scope only works on Figma Enterprise; without it tokens degrades to published styles automatically (expected behavior, not an error — say so).
  3. export FIGMA_TOKEN="figd_…" — and suggest persisting it (shell profile or project .env) so no future session repeats this.
While onboarding, also set expectations in one breath: every import lands as a local frozen file with recorded provenance — renders never call Figma, re-running a command re-imports only what changed in Figma, and one token works for assets, brand tokens, and components across every file their Figma account can view.
  • Phases 4–5 (motion/shaders): the Figma MCP connector (one-click OAuth), a separate credential from the token. If MCP tools error unauthenticated, tell the user to connect the Figma connector and stop.
  • Say exactly which credential a failing phase needs — never present the split as broken.
  • BAD_TOKEN (401) mid-flow → the token is expired/revoked; re-mint. FORBIDDEN (403) → missing read scope or no access to that file — check scopes + file visibility. REQUIRES_ENTERPRISE (403 on variables) → not a failure: styles fallback already ran.
Rate-limit awareness (spec §2.1): MCP on a Starter plan is 6 tool calls/month (figma plan matrix as of 2026-07 — re-verify if quotas look off) — batch with recursive:true on the parent node, skip verification screenshots unless asked, and cache raw MCP responses so re-derivation never spends a second call. REST is per-minute (10+/min, per-endpoint buckets) — fine at volume, back off on 429.

Routing

Parse the user's figma link with parseFigmaRef (URL, fileKey:nodeId, bare fileKey). Then by intent:
  • "use this layer / logo / image" → Asset (CLI)
  • "pull my brand / colors / tokens" → Tokens (CLI)
  • "build a scene from this frame" → Component (CLI)
  • "import this animation / motion" → Motion (MCP, below)
  • a storyboard section / filmstrip of scene frames → Storyboard (below)
  • shader fill/effect → Shaders (below)
Narrate every step for the user — before each command say what you're about to pull from Figma; after it, say where the artifact landed (the frozen path / sidecar / component dir), what changed in the composition, and the immediate next action (preview, add printed variables, re-import to link bindings). The user should never have to ask "did it work?" or "now what?".

Assets (Phase 1 — CLI)

bash
hyperframes figma asset '<url-or-fileKey:nodeId>' [--format svg|png|jpg|pdf] [--scale 2] [--description "..."] [--entity "..."]
Renders over REST, sanitizes SVG, freezes under .media/images/, appends the manifest with provenance, regenerates .media/index.md (the shared media-use inventory), prints an <img> snippet. Idempotent per fileKey:nodeId:format:scale:version. Prefer SVG for vectors/logos (scalable, animatable), PNG --scale 2 for raster fidelity. Always pass --description "<what it is>" (it becomes the index row + <img alt>); add --entity "<name>" for named brand marks so media-use resolve --entity finds them later (entity hits match across image/icon).

Tokens (Phase 2 — CLI)

bash
hyperframes figma tokens <fileKey>
Imports variables as composition brand-variable entries + figma-tokens.json sidecar + binding-index records (.media/figma-bindings.jsonl). Variables are Enterprise-gated upstream: on other plans the command degrades to published-style metadata (values resolve at component-import time). Add the printed entries to the composition's data-composition-variables.
Import tokens before components when both are wanted — that's what lets component colors link to brand variables instead of baking duplicates.
Non-Enterprise variables path (field-tested): REST variables are Enterprise-gated, but the Figma MCP get_variable_defs is not. When tokens reports REQUIRES_ENTERPRISE and the user has the MCP connector, you can build the index yourself: (1) get_variable_defs on the scene's parent node — ONE call, cache the raw JSON to .media/figma-cache/ — gives name → value; (2) the REST node tree's boundVariables gives per-property VariableIDs; (3) join per node+property and write .media/figma-bindings.jsonl rows ({kind:"binding", figmaId, sourceFileKey, compositionVariableId: "figma:<name>", version}) plus the composition-variable entries. Everything downstream (component var() resolution, refresh, runtime CSS variables) is the shipped machinery. Label it for the user: "tokens via the Figma connector — Enterprise plans get this from hyperframes figma tokens directly."
The runtime defines every declared composition variable as a CSS custom property (document root + sub-comp hosts), so imported var(--slug, literal) fills recolor when the variable default changes — updating one value in data-composition-variables re-brands every imported component without re-importing anything. hyperframes render --variables '<json>' overrides them at render time.

Components (Phase 3 — CLI)

bash
hyperframes figma component '<url-or-fileKey:nodeId>'
Node tree → editable HTML at exact figma geometry, packaged as a registry item under compositions/components/<name>/. Vectors/boolean-ops auto-rasterize via Phase-1 export. Binding pass (spec §7.1, exact-ID only — never value matching):
  • Fill bound to an imported token → var(--slug, #literal) — brand refresh propagates.
  • Bound to an unknown token → literal + data-figma-unresolved flag. The command tells you; offer the user: run tokens on the source (or library) file, then re-import the component to link them. Ask once per unknown library which file it is — never guess, never match by hex.

Motion (Phase 4 — MCP, the headline)

Usage beacon: MCP phases have no CLI touchpoint, so fire the skill beacon at start and finish (anonymous, consent-gated, never fails): npx hyperframes events --skill=figma-motion when you begin, npx hyperframes events --skill=figma-motion --event=skill_completed --outcome=success|error when done. Same for shaders (figma-shaders) and storyboards (figma-storyboard).
No REST equivalent exists. You drive the MCP tools, then hand output to the pure helpers in @hyperframes/core/figma:
  1. get_motion_context(fileKey, nodeId) — use recursive:true on the parent frame (one call for the whole scene, not one per element). Save the raw JSON next to the project (.media/figma-cache/) so retranslation is free.
  2. Normalize into a MotionDoc: per animated property a MotionTrack { property (motion.dev name), values, times (0..1), ease[] (named or [x1,y1,x2,y2] bezier), duration, repeat }. Selector = the element's stable id (#<id> from Phase-3 output or the authored scene).
  3. motionToGsap(doc)emitTimelineScript(spec) → inject as a <script> after the GSAP + CustomEase CDN tags. Paused, finite, registered on window.__timelines with a literal key.
  4. Untranslatable track (shader-driven, unsupported prop, complex masks) → bake: export_video → freeze MP4 → embed as <video class="clip">. Exception: shader-driven tracks — figma's export path flattens shaders to the base color (see Shaders below), so a bake there silently loses the shader; ask the user for a native figma export instead. Always say which path you used and why. Named eases outside the mapped set fall back to linear — the mapping table lives in motionEase.ts; flag the fallback to the user when it fires.
  5. Run npx hyperframes lint && npx hyperframes validate before calling it done.

Shaders (Phase 5 — mostly manual)

Figma's MCP render path does not execute shaders (they flatten to the base color), and shader source is only reachable for library-published styles (paid Full seat). Default path: ask the user to export the shader frame natively in Figma (PNG or Motion MP4), then import it as a Phase-1 asset / clip. Don't attempt MCP pixel capture of a shader — it will silently produce the wrong thing.

Storyboards (a SECTION of scene frames → animation)

The cardinal rule: storyboard frames are KEYFRAMES, not slides. Two frames containing the same element describe that element's state through time — animate the ELEMENT between the states; never play the frames as a sequence of stills. A logo drawn in four consecutive frames at descending y is ONE element rising through four keyframes. Playing storyboard frames back-to-back is the failure mode; reconstructing the element timelines they imply is the job.
Storyboard files follow a grammar you can parse mechanically — don't eyeball, decode:
  1. Scene units: inside the SECTION, every frame-sized node is a scene — both named FRAMEs and loose full-frame RECTANGLEs (designers paste stills straight into the section). Filter by size (≈ composition aspect, e.g. >1400×900), not by node type or name.
  2. Order = x-position (row-major if the strip wraps). Sort scenes by absoluteBoundingBox.x.
  3. Diff adjacent frames into element chains — this is where the animation lives. Match children across consecutive frames: first by name (same name = same element → tween its relative x/y/w/h between states), then by geometry similarity (similar size + nearby center = same logical element whose pixels changed → crossfade the two exports in place while tweening geometry; covers typed-text progressions and morph states). Unmatched children enter/exit at their scene's beat. Frame background fills tween as a color track. Export ONE asset per chain (one per state only when pixels genuinely differ) — never one still per frame.
  4. Stills are the fallback, not the default — only for frames that don't decompose (flat full-frame screenshots with no shared elements); those get the animatic treatment below.
  5. Director notes: TEXT nodes below the strip are motion intent, paired to the scene whose x-range they overlap. They describe how to animate — they are not on-screen copy.
  6. Batch exports (elements or stills): GET /v1/images accepts comma-separated ids, but big scene frames hit "Render timeout" past ~12 ids — chunk to ~4 per call with a retry. (One call per scene wastes the rate budget; 26 scenes ≈ 52 calls via the single-asset path.)
  7. Note verbs → transitions (starter vocabulary, extend as encountered):
Note saysDo
EXPLOSION / BURSTincoming scale ~1.5→1 + fade, power3.out
SLIDES / SLIDE TO THE… / SCROLLdirectional slide in from that edge
MORPH / REVEALScrossfade — or Phase-3 import if the motion is inside one scene
CYCLE THROUGH / EACH ONElonger hold — or Phase-3 import if items animate within the scene
(no note)crossfade + slow Ken-Burns drift
  1. Stills vs. components routing: a note describing motion between scenes → transition on the still (above). A note describing motion inside a scene ("TEXT LINES REVEAL ONE AFTER THE OTHER", "PILLS ANIMATE IN") → that frame deserves a Phase-3 component import (real elements) animated per the note, not a flat PNG. Do the animatic pass first with stills, then upgrade the scenes the notes single out.
  2. One main timeline sequences everything (opacity/x/y per scene at absolute times) — no per-scene sub-compositions needed for an animatic.
  3. Escalation — frames depict ONE product UI → rebuild the app, not element chains. When every frame is the same application screen in successive states (a signup flow, a settings panel, a player), element chains undersell it. Rebuild the UI as live DOM — Phase-3 component import for the parts that change state, real exported pixels for static chrome (code what changes state, freeze what doesn't) — and treat each frame delta as an interaction to perform, not a tween to apply: the cursor enters, clicks the control, the state responds, screens push/slide as real navigation. The result reads as one continuous screen recording of a working app. This is the cardinal rule taken to its conclusion for UI flows; the stills/element-chain treatments are for storyboards that aren't one coherent application.

Determinism

Never leave a Figma URL in the composition — freeze first. Never emit repeat: -1. Timelines paused, finite, literal window.__timelines keys. All Figma I/O at import time; render sees local files only.
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