A Faster Way to Move Images from Figma into Webflow
Moving an image from Figma to Webflow shouldn’t take this many steps.
Export the image. Find it in Downloads. Rename it. Open Webflow’s Assets panel. Upload it. Repeat.
AssetPaste cuts out most of that routine. Copy an image from Figma, paste it into AssetPaste, give it a sensible name, and upload it directly to Webflow Assets.
It lives inside Webflow
AssetPaste is a lightweight extension that works inside the Webflow Designer, so there’s no separate app to keep open.
It accepts images copied from Figma, screenshots, and other apps. You can also drag and drop files or select them manually when copy and paste isn’t the right fit.
Before uploading, you can:
- Preview the image
- Rename the file
- Add optional alt text
Nothing complicated. Just the small controls you usually need before an image enters a project.
What happens to image quality?
AssetPaste doesn’t compress every image automatically.
If your image is under Webflow’s 4 MB upload limit, AssetPaste preserves the original file. You get the full-quality image in Webflow and can then use Webflow’s native Image Compressor to optimize it for the site.
That means you don’t need to run images through another compression service before uploading them.
Images larger than 4 MB are handled differently. AssetPaste optimizes those files locally in your browser so they can fit within Webflow’s upload limit and upload successfully.
The rule is simple:
- Under 4 MB: keep the original
- Over 4 MB: optimize it enough to upload
A small tool for an annoyingly repetitive job
AssetPaste isn’t trying to replace Webflow’s asset tools. It removes the awkward bit before them—the exporting, downloading, locating, and manually uploading that piles up when a project contains dozens of images.
Copy. Paste. Name. Upload.
That’s the whole idea.
AssetPaste is made by AirDokan.
Get it here


