Open any product or post
Browse to a product, listing, or article. Pinterpost is right there in your Chrome sidebar, no separate app to open or image to upload.
From Canva and Tailwind to dedicated AI tools, here is how the main Pinterest pin generators stack up. And where Pinterpost fits.
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A Pinterest pin generator is a tool that creates pin images, and sometimes the titles, descriptions, and scheduling, so you do not design each pin by hand. They range from design tools like Canva to schedulers like Tailwind to dedicated AI generators. Pinterpost is the one built as a Chrome extension: right-click any product or post and it generates up to 30 pins, writes the SEO, and publishes them on a safe schedule.
This is the flow a complete pin generator should have, from source image to published pins.
Browse to a product, listing, or article. Pinterpost is right there in your Chrome sidebar, no separate app to open or image to upload.
Hover any image and click Recreate. Pinterpost pulls it in instantly, the input most generators make you upload by hand.
Pinterpost designs up to 30 distinct pins, writes a title and description for each, and applies your destination link across the batch.
Pinterpost paces the batch across your boards and publishes through Pinterest's official API, so the generator finishes the job instead of stopping at the design.
Most tools start from an upload or a blank canvas. Pinterpost starts from a right-click on whatever product or post you're already viewing.
Not 30 copies. Each pin is a different design, which is the fresh variety Pinterest rewards and the part that drives reach.
A keyword-aware title and description per pin, so the batch is built to be found in search, not just to look good.
Pinterpost spaces the batch out through Pinterest's official API, so a generator that makes 30 pins also posts them safely.
Bring a Canva design as a reference and every generated pin keeps your fonts, colors, and layout, so volume stays on-brand.
$1 for a 3-day trial, then $29/mo for 50 pins, so you can compare it against any other generator without a big commitment.
A Pinterest pin generator is any tool that helps you create pins faster than designing each by hand, from template-based design tools to AI generators that build whole pins from an image or prompt. The more complete ones also write the SEO and schedule the pins.
They matter because Pinterest is a visual search engine, with 631 million monthly active users in Q1 2026, that rewards a steady stream of fresh pins. Getting to that volume by hand is slow, which is why a generator is worth the effort to pick well.
It depends on your bottleneck. For polished one-off designs, Canva is hard to beat. For a multi-network scheduling suite, Tailwind is the established choice. For turning products and posts into many pins with the SEO and scheduling handled, an end-to-end tool like Pinterpost is the fit.
The honest answer is that "best" maps to where you are losing time. If design is your slow point, a design tool helps most; if volume and posting are, an automation tool helps more. Match the generator to the part of the job you actually want to remove.
A fair look at the main options on the things that decide it. Tools change often, so check current plans before you commit.
| Tool | Makes many pins | Writes SEO | Schedules | Where it runs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pinterpost | Up to 30 per image | Yes, per pin | Yes, official API | Chrome extension |
| Canva | One at a time | Not its focus | Via a planner | Web and apps |
| Tailwind | Yes, Tailwind Create | Yes | Yes, official partner | Web app |
| Dedicated AI pin builders | Yes | Often | Some plans | Web app |
| General AI image tools | Images, not finished pins | No | No | Web app |
The split that matters: design-only tools hand you images, while end-to-end tools also write the SEO and publish on a schedule.
Free tiers are genuinely useful for trying a workflow, and tools like Canva and Tailwind have them. The catch is the limits: free plans usually cap how many designs or scheduled posts you get, and some add watermarks, which bite as soon as you post at real volume.
Pinterpost is not free, but it is cheap to test at $1 for a 3-day trial that includes 10 pins, then $29/mo for 50 pins. Because the trial covers the full flow, generate, write the SEO, and publish, you can judge the whole job rather than just the design step.
No. Pinterest does not ban AI-designed pins; it penalizes spam, meaning duplicate images and rapid bulk posting. The risk comes from how a tool is used, posting the same pin over and over, not from AI itself.
A safe generator produces distinct variants and posts them on a sensible schedule. Pinterpost does both: every pin is a different design and description, published through Pinterest's official API on a spaced-out cadence, so an AI workflow stays clear of the spam signals.
The best Pinterest pin size is a 2:3 vertical ratio, 1000 by 1500 pixels. A good generator should output that size by default; general AI image tools often default to square or landscape, which means re-cropping every pin.
Pinterpost generates at the correct 2:3 ratio with readable title text, so every pin in a batch is feed-ready. It is one of the things to check before trusting a generator's output to perform on Pinterest.
Five things separate a complete tool from a half one: it makes distinct variants, not copies, outputs the correct 2:3 size, writes the Pinterest SEO, schedules through the official API, and fits the way you already work rather than adding another dashboard.
Pinterpost was built against that checklist: up to 30 distinct pins per image, correct sizing, per-pin SEO, official-API scheduling, and a right-click workflow inside the browser. Whatever you choose, those are the boxes worth ticking.
Several tools have free tiers, including Canva and Tailwind, though free plans cap designs or scheduled posts. Pinterpost is not free but is cheap to test at $1 for a 3-day trial, then $29/mo for 50 pins, with the SEO and scheduling included.
Some can. Dedicated tools like Pinterpost and Tailwind write keyword-aware titles and descriptions per pin, while pure design and image tools usually leave the SEO to you. If search visibility matters, pick a generator that writes the copy.
Yes, with the right tool. Pinterpost lets you drop in a Canva template or reference pins so every generated variant keeps your fonts, colors, and layout, rather than looking generic.
It varies widely. Design tools tend to produce one pin at a time, while batch generators make many. Pinterpost generates up to 30 distinct pins from a single image in one pass.
Try everything for $1 over 3 days, which includes 10 pins. After that, plans start at $29/mo for 50 pins on the Starter plan. Cancel anytime during the trial.
Right-click any product. Generate 30 pins, with the SEO and scheduling built in.
$1 to start · Cancel anytime · Works on Chrome, Edge, Brave