AI Styling updates are live in Decks
AI Styling, a Lexical rich text editor for briefs and style notes, and slide-level refinements — creative control without fighting your design tool.
Creating a great deck shouldn't feel like wrestling with a design tool. You know what you want it to look like — the type, the color, the mood — but most tools make you choose between a template that almost fits and a blank canvas that eats your afternoon.
Decks AI Styling is officially live. You now have total creative control over every single detail, without rebuilding the whole deck every time something needs to change.
What's new
Independent layouts
Headers, footers, title slides, and conclusions each carry their own job. A bold opener shouldn't force the same treatment on your closing slide, and your running footer shouldn't inherit the drama of a section break.
Style each layout type completely independently — set typography, spacing, and color once per role, and Decks keeps them consistent where you want consistency and distinct where you don't.
Image-to-style
Have a mood board? A screenshot of a deck you admire? A brand reference that isn't quite a style guide?
Upload an image or paste a screenshot and Decks generates a matching presentation style from it — palette, type treatment, and overall feel. No hex codes to hunt down, no guessing at font pairings. Start from something you already like and iterate from there.
Slide-level control
Sometimes one slide is the problem. Maybe the quote slide needs a different background, or a data-heavy slide needs tighter margins than the rest of the deck.
Perfect the look of a single slide without altering everything else. Fix the outlier, keep the system.
Micro-refinements
Zoom in on individual elements and refine them on the fly — a headline weight, a bullet spacing, an accent color on one callout. The kind of tweaks that used to mean breaking out of the flow and into a separate design tool.
Rich text editor
The content and style fields are no longer plain textareas. They now use a Lexical-based editor — the same kind of writing surface you'd expect in a modern doc tool, not a single block of unformatted text.
You get formatting when you need emphasis or structure, slash commands for quick inserts, and markdown shortcuts if you think in # headings and - bullets. Write the way you already write; Decks reads the structure instead of guessing at intent from a wall of plain text.
See it in action
Try it
The styling updates are live at decks.tryfuchka.com. Open a deck, head into design mode, and start with whatever feels most natural — a reference image, a single slide that needs fixing, or a footer you've been meaning to get right.
Stop fighting your slides. Build something that looks like you meant it to.