AGP Picks
View all

Altia adds SVG export to Figma plugin for embedded UI teams

11 hours ago

By AI, Created 9:51 PM UTC, May 26, 2026, /AGP/ – Altia released version 1.2.1 of its Figma Exporter Plugin, adding SVG export and other workflow features aimed at helping engineers move designs from Figma to production-ready embedded interfaces faster. The update targets HMI, automotive, industrial and medical teams that need optimized code without manual asset rebuilds or heavy runtime dependencies.

Why it matters: - Embedded UI teams often lose time when design assets must be manually recreated for the target device. - Altia’s latest Figma plugin update is built to reduce that handoff gap and keep design intent intact from Figma to production code. - The workflow is aimed at embedded products where memory, startup time and hardware constraints matter.

What happened: - Altia announced version 1.2.1 of the Altia Exporter Plugin for Figma on May 27, 2026. - The release adds expanded SVG export to the plugin’s direct design-to-deployment pipeline. - The plugin is available now at no charge from the Figma Marketplace. - More information is available at more information or by emailing info@altia.com.

The details: - Altia says the plugin moves engineering teams directly from Figma designs to optimized, production-ready embedded UI without manual asset translation or heavyweight runtime dependencies. - Michael Hill, Altia’s vice president of engineering, said the release is designed to reduce friction across the workflow and cut opportunities for designs to drift off spec. - The plugin goes beyond exporting images or layout data and generates deployable embedded UI through Altia Design. - SVG export now lets engineers move scalable vector graphics through the Altia pipeline. - The SVG output is positioned for embedded displays because it is resolution-independent and compact. - Theming support lets teams maintain multiple visual themes in one Figma source and export them through Altia. - Theming support is intended for product variants, white-label configurations and light or dark mode support without duplicating work. - Auto Layout export is now fully supported, preserving responsive design intent as designs move from Figma to Altia Design. - Teams can export Figma Sections directly. - Teams can also export all component variants instead of only the default option. - Altia says the plugin generates optimized code through the Altia toolchain. - Altia says the toolchain produces smaller memory footprints, faster startup times and compatibility with constrained hardware. - The plugin does not place a heavy runtime between the design and the device.

Between the lines: - The update reflects a push to treat Figma as a source of truth for embedded products, not just a design handoff tool. - That matters for automotive cockpits, medical devices, industrial HMIs and consumer appliances, where display requirements vary and resource limits are tight. - Altia is positioning the plugin against browser-oriented Figma integrations that stop at export and still leave engineering to rebuild assets. - The company is also trying to reduce serial dependencies by letting design and engineering work in parallel.

What’s next: - Altia says teams should expect fewer handoff delays and less rework as they move from design to implementation. - The company says teams using scripting layers or manual recreation of Figma assets may see faster movement between disciplines. - Altia’s broader toolset remains centered on Altia Design and Altia DeepScreen for concept-to-production GUI development.

The bottom line: - Altia is betting that embedded UI teams want a cleaner path from Figma to production code, with fewer manual steps and less room for drift.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

Sign up for:

Colorado Industry Wire

The daily local news briefing you can trust. Every day. Subscribe now.

By signing up, you agree to our Terms & Conditions.

Share this page:

Sign up for:

Colorado Industry Wire

The daily local news briefing you can trust. Every day. Subscribe now.

By signing up, you agree to our Terms & Conditions.