One year ago I was working as a growth engineer at Robinhood, where my team needed a better way to build and improve complex forms for use cases like signup, onboarding, and applications.
Last week, we opened up public access to Feathery, a low-code platform enabling product teams to build powerful, developer-friendly forms. It’s complete with a Webflow-like visual editor, a flow builder that supports advanced conditional logic, powerful integrations like Plaid and Firebase, and open-source embed libraries with extensible APIs.
If you’re part of a product team or startup looking to build better forms, you can get started with Feathery right now for free. I’d love for you to take a look at the platform, share questions and feedback, and I’ll answer those here today.
You can use your design system in two ways.
1. You can import your design system into Feathery via Themes, which apply cascading styles for different elements (https://docs.feathery.io/platform/build/themes)
2. You can apply custom CSS styles and classes directly to the form and its components via our embed SDK (https://docs.feathery.io/develop/react#form)
One year ago I was working as a growth engineer at Robinhood, where my team needed a better way to build and improve complex forms for use cases like signup, onboarding, and applications.
Last week, we opened up public access to Feathery, a low-code platform enabling product teams to build powerful, developer-friendly forms. It’s complete with a Webflow-like visual editor, a flow builder that supports advanced conditional logic, powerful integrations like Plaid and Firebase, and open-source embed libraries with extensible APIs.
If you’re part of a product team or startup looking to build better forms, you can get started with Feathery right now for free. I’d love for you to take a look at the platform, share questions and feedback, and I’ll answer those here today.