A drag-and-drop tool for building moodboards, lookbooks, and printable creative decks.
Wrap was built around a frustratingly common workflow problem: arranging images inside traditional document editors like Google Docs or Microsoft Word. Whether building stylist lookbooks or photography shot lists, simple layout tasks quickly become slow, fragile, and difficult to format cleanly for printing or PDF export.
The tool was designed around two recurring creative workflows: fashion lookbooks and photography moodboards. Users can bulk upload imagery, arrange visual references into flexible layouts, attach links and notes where needed, preview the final composition, then export polished PDFs designed specifically for printing or client sharing.
Over time, the product evolved into a lightweight archival system where moodboards and lookbooks become persistent “wraps” that can be revisited, duplicated, multi-selected, organized, or deleted over time.
Wrap was designed around creative workflows that traditionally happen inside tools poorly suited for image-heavy layout tasks, particularly fashion styling decks and photography shot planning.
Users can upload large batches of imagery directly from folders on their computer, allowing moodboards and visual references to be assembled quickly without manual image placement friction.
Lookbooks support attached purchase links, written notes, outfit commentary, and flexible image placement, allowing stylists to create structured recommendation decks for clients.
Moodboard mode removes text and link functionality entirely in favor of rapid visual composition, optimized for high-volume inspiration gathering and photography shot-list planning.
Every wrap can be previewed before export and automatically formatted into printable PDFs with generated title pages and clean visual hierarchy for client delivery or on-set usage.
Saved moodboards and lookbooks become persistent “wraps” that can be revisited, organized, multi-selected, or batch deleted over time as creative projects evolve.
The platform prioritizes fast visual arrangement and image positioning, solving one of the biggest friction points present in traditional document editors built primarily for text.
Unlike traditional moodboard tools optimized primarily for screens, Wrap was intentionally designed around physical printing workflows, on-set usability, and export-ready formatting.