Open the post you want pins for
Any article, brand new or pulled from your archive. Pinterpost sits in your Chrome sidebar right next to the post, one tap from Pinterest.
Open the post, right-click its image, done. Pinterpost builds the pins, writes the SEO, links each to the article, and schedules them.
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Turning a blog post into Pinterest pins means converting one published article into many pins that link back to it. Pinterpost is a Chrome extension that does this from the post itself: open the article, right-click its image, and it generates up to 30 pins, writes the Pinterest SEO, sets the post URL on each, and schedules them. New posts and forgotten archives both become a fresh run of pins.
No screenshots, no re-uploading the featured image, no separate scheduler. It all happens on the post in your Chrome sidebar.
Any article, brand new or pulled from your archive. Pinterpost sits in your Chrome sidebar right next to the post, one tap from Pinterest.
Right-click the featured image or any in-post photo and hit Recreate. Pinterpost pulls it in instantly, with no download and no screenshot.
Drop in your blog's Canva template or pull a style from a board. Every pin matches your brand, and you can prompt a specific angle for the post.
Pinterpost designs up to 30 pins, sets the post URL on each, and auto-publishes them to your board, now or at a time you pick.
Turn a post into pins from its featured image, an in-post photo, or a Canva template. No exporting, downloading, or switching tabs.
Match keeps pins on your blog's look, Remix riffs on it, Inspire borrows the vibe. You set how far each one goes.
Each pin gets a keyword title, description, and alt text written for how people search Pinterest, which is not how they search Google.
Turn one post into up to 30 distinct pins in under 60 seconds, each able to chase a different search.
Set the article URL once and the whole batch points to it, so every pin is a fresh doorway into the same post.
Turn on auto-publish and Pinterpost posts a post's batch to your board for you, now or at a scheduled time, with no manual posting.
| Without Pinterpost | With Pinterpost | |
|---|---|---|
| Pins per post | One at publish | Up to 30, scheduled |
| Old posts | Sitting idle | Repurposed into new pins |
| Workflow | Editor, then a scheduler | One right-click on the post |
A single how-to can have pins for the beginner search, the quick version, and the mistake-to-avoid search, each pulling a different reader to the same article.
The whole batch points at that one article, so pins turn into traffic on the page you want to grow, not scattered impressions.
Pinterest rewards different phrasing than Google, so a post written to rank on search gets re-tuned to reach a fresh Pinterest audience.
Run the flow on a two-year-old article and it gets a fresh run of pins, so your archive keeps earning long after it leaves the blog.
Recipes, DIY, finance, travel, a niche site, or a company blog. If the post has an image and a URL, Pinterpost can turn it into pins.
Each distinct pin keeps surfacing in search for months, so a single article keeps sending readers long after you publish, with no reposting.
You turn a blog post into Pinterest pins by taking its image, designing several pins that each link back to the article, and writing a Pinterest-style title and description for each. The goal is many distinct pins per post, not one, because that gives the article more ways to be found in search.
Pinterpost does the whole conversion from the post itself. Open the article, right-click its image, and it generates up to 30 pins, sets the post URL on each, writes the SEO, and schedules them. One published post becomes a month of pins without leaving the page.
Yes. The featured image is the natural source, but Pinterpost can recreate any photo in the article, and every pin it makes carries the post's URL as its destination. You do not export anything or paste a link by hand.
That matters because the image and the link are the two pieces a pin needs. Pinterpost grabs the image from the page you're on and applies the article URL across the batch, so the conversion from post to pins is a single action.
You repurpose an old post by giving it brand-new pin designs that link back to the same article. Pinterest treats a new pin as fresh content even when the post is years old, so your archive is a backlog of articles that could be earning reach right now.
Pinterpost makes the revival a routine. Open any old post, right-click its image, and generate a fresh batch that links to it. Work through your archive a post at a time and each one gets a new run of distinct pins, no rewriting required.
No, as long as the pins are genuinely different. The spammy pattern is reposting one identical pin over and over; publishing many distinct designs for one article is exactly what Pinterest rewards. The line is duplicate images, not the number of pins per post.
Pinterpost stays on the right side of it. Every pin in a post's batch is a different design, title, and description, so you avoid the duplicate signal, and you choose when each batch publishes, so a month of pins from one post never reads as duplicate-and-dump.
The best Pinterest pin size is a 2:3 vertical ratio, 1000 by 1500 pixels. This matters because a blog featured image is usually wide, so it shrinks in a vertical feed and needs rebuilding into a tall pin, often with the post title set as a text overlay.
Pinterpost handles that rebuild. It reshapes the post image into properly sized vertical pins, adds readable title text drawn from the article, and outputs every variant ready to publish, so you never crop a featured image by hand.
Yes, and it is the whole point of pinning an article. Each pin's destination should be the post URL, so a reader who taps the pin lands on the article that earns the ad revenue or the email signup.
Pinterpost sets that link once and applies it to the entire batch, so 30 pins of a post all point to the same article without 30 rounds of copy-paste. It works for any platform, WordPress, Ghost, Substack, or your own site, because the link is just a URL.
The manual version is a chain: open a design tool to rebuild the featured image, research Pinterest keywords, paste the post URL onto each pin, then load a separate scheduler. Pinterpost folds all four into one right-click on the post.
| Step | By hand | Pinterpost |
|---|---|---|
| Rebuild the image | Reshape the featured image in an editor | Reshaped into 30 vertical pins |
| Write the SEO | Research keywords, write each title | Written for you, per pin |
| Link to the post | Paste the URL onto every pin | Applied across the whole batch |
| Schedule and publish | Export, then schedule in a separate app | Auto-published to your board |
| Where it runs | Several tabs and tools | The post you're already on |
Already have a Canva template for your pins? Drop it in as a reference and Pinterpost multiplies it into on-brand variants, then writes the SEO and schedules them around your post.
No. What Pinterest flags is duplicate pins and rapid bulk dumping, not many distinct pins for one post. Every pin Pinterpost makes is a different design, title, and description, so you avoid the duplicate signal, and you choose when each batch publishes, so converting a post into a batch stays inside the limits.
About a minute to set up. Install Pinterpost, connect Pinterest in one tap, then open the post and right-click its image. The batch is generated and scheduled in the same session.
No. Pinterpost designs every pin from the post's image, so design skills are optional. If you have a Canva template for your pins, drop it in as a reference and Pinterpost multiplies it into on-brand variants.
Yes. Pinterpost works on any post open in your browser, including ones you manage for a client or team, so you can generate pins straight from the published article and schedule them to the connected Pinterest account.
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.
Open a post, right-click its image, and ship 30 pins that link back. Even your oldest articles.
$1 to start · Cancel anytime · Works on Chrome, Edge, Brave