Turn Moodboards Into Money with a Pinterest Downloader
We believe early-stage design should be playful, exploratory, and deeply visual blending curiosity with fast execution. And the faster we can get into that mindset, the better the outcomes.
At Uninspired, our process starts with two moodboards. Always. Each one serves a very different (but equally important) purpose:
Moodboard A = Direction
Think of this as your compass.
Be hyper-specific if needed: materials, lighting setups, camera angles, textures, colors, compositional choices, environmental conditions, typography, shape, alignment, format, temperature (visual or literal), cropping, negative space, perspective, focal point, hierarchy, movement style (snappy, fluid, jittery), resolution, print method.
This isn’t where you finalize fonts. It’s where you commit to a feeling.
Moodboard B = Raw Material
Stuff you want to steal, slice or stylize. If Moodboard A is strategy, Moodboard B is inventory.
Gather elements that make you pause: an interface layout, a poster format, a button animation, a gritty duotone, a magazine grid. Don’t worry if it clashes with your vibe board—this board isn’t about taste. It’s about ingredients.
And this matters more than ever — because generative tools (AI, or your own brain) need solid raw input. Want better outputs? Feed the machine better source material.
Moodboard Craze = Pinterest Downloader
We build moodboards for every project, every direction, sometimes just to explore weird ideas that don't go anywhere because that's how creativity works. You need inputs to get outputs. This system is just one idea of many on how to systematize your creative flow without eliminating play. If you want to know another system, check it out here.
That’s why we built Unpinned a Pinterest downloader, with which you stop wasting time saving pins one by one.
Honestly, that's also why the free version includes 50 pins per day because for our own projects, that’s usually enough. We’re the kind of people who wouldn’t need the Pro plan either.