Find a pin worth reusing
Open a pin you want more from: a past winner, an old one that stalled, or a brand-new product shot. Anything in your browser works as a starting point.
Reposting the same pin gets you ignored. Right-click any pin and Pinterpost recreates it into distinct new designs, writes new SEO, and auto-publishes to Pinterest.
Start for $1 · Cancel anytime
Recreating Pinterest pins means turning one pin or image into many genuinely different designs instead of reposting the same one. Pinterpost is a Chrome extension that right-clicks any existing pin, product, or photo and recreates it into up to 30 distinct pins, each with its own layout, title, and description, then auto-publishes them to your board. Because every one is a new design, you avoid the duplicate-image signal Pinterest penalizes.
No reopening the design tool, no re-uploading, no manual repost. Recreate runs in your Chrome sidebar on the page you're already on.
Open a pin you want more from: a past winner, an old one that stalled, or a brand-new product shot. Anything in your browser works as a starting point.
Hover the pin and click Recreate. Pinterpost pulls the image in instantly, with no download, no re-upload, and no switching tabs.
Pick a mode: Match holds the original look, Remix riffs on it, Inspire just borrows the vibe. You steer how close each new pin stays to the source.
Pinterpost recreates up to 30 distinct pins in under 60 seconds, writes a new title and description for each, then publishes or schedules the batch to your Pinterest board.
Point it at an existing pin, a product photo, a blog image, a Canva template, or a file from your computer. No download, no re-upload.
Three recreate modes: Match holds the original look, Remix riffs on it, Inspire borrows the vibe. You decide how far each version travels.
Every recreated pin gets a new keyword title, description, and alt text, not a copy of the original caption stamped on each one.
One Recreate turns a single pin into up to 30 distinct designs in under 60 seconds, different layouts, not 30 copies.
Every recreated pin lands in one place, ready to reschedule, refresh, or recreate again later.
Turn on auto-publish and Pinterpost posts the recreated batch to your board for you, now or at a time you pick.
| Reposting | With Recreate | |
|---|---|---|
| Reusing a pin | The same image again | Up to 30 fresh designs |
| Old pins | Sit unused | Back in the feed as new |
| Duplicate risk | High, same file | None, every pin distinct |
Recreating a top pin into new designs lets you ride a proven idea again without the duplicate penalty that comes from saving the same image twice.
Pins that stalled get a fresh design and new SEO, so content you already made starts pulling traffic again instead of sitting idle in your account.
One concept becomes up to 30 distinct pins, each its own search bet, so a single winner ends up covering far more keywords than the original ever could.
Match mode holds your layout, fonts, and colors, so recreated pins read as yours rather than random AI art that happens to be vertical.
Turn on auto-publish and the recreated batch posts to your board for you, so refreshing your best pins stops eating an afternoon.
Pinterest favors new pins over recycled ones, so recreating gives the algorithm the variety it rewards while you reuse the ideas that already worked.
Recreating a Pinterest pin means taking one pin or image and producing genuinely different versions of it, with new layouts, colors, and copy, rather than reposting the same file. The goal is to get more reach from one idea without tripping the duplicate-content signal Pinterest watches for.
Pinterpost does this in one step. You right-click any existing pin, product, or photo and it recreates up to 30 distinct designs, each with its own title and description, then publishes them to your board. One pin you already have becomes a whole batch of new ones.
You can, but it rarely helps. Pinterest treats an identical image saved again as a duplicate, so a straight repost usually gets little fresh distribution and can look like spam if you do it often. The platform is built to reward new pins over recycled ones.
Recreating is the safe way to reuse a winning idea. Instead of saving the same image again, Pinterpost turns it into new designs with new copy, so each one counts as a fresh pin. You get to ride a proven concept again without reposting the exact file.
Refreshing a pin means giving an existing idea a new design and new keywords so Pinterest treats it as fresh content. It is one of the highest-leverage things you can do, because the concept is already proven and only the execution needs updating.
With Pinterpost you point Recreate at an old pin and generate a batch of new versions in seconds, each with updated SEO. Content you made months ago goes back into the feed as new pins, so a quiet account starts working again without new ideas.
No. Pinterest does not penalize making new designs from your own ideas; what it penalizes is spam, meaning duplicate images and rapid bulk dumping. Distinct pins published at a sensible pace are exactly the pattern active accounts use to grow.
Pinterpost is built to stay on the right side of that line. Every recreated pin is a different design and description, so you avoid the duplicate signal, and because you choose when each batch publishes, you can space your pins out instead of posting them all at once.
There is no fixed number, but more distinct angles on a strong idea generally means more chances to rank, as long as each one is genuinely different. A handful of varied designs for a proven concept tends to outperform a single pin posted once.
Pinterpost lets you recreate up to 30 versions of one pin in a single pass, each a different design. You can publish the strongest few now and keep the rest in your gallery to schedule later, so one idea gives you enough fresh pins to fill weeks.
Yes. Anything you can open in your browser can be a starting point: your own pins, a product photo, a blog image, a Canva template, or a file from your computer. Recreate pulls the image in without a download or a re-upload.
From there Pinterpost generates new designs around it rather than copying it, so the output is a set of original pins built from the source. The Match, Remix, and Inspire modes let you control how close each version stays to where you started.
The manual way to recreate a pin is a loop: reopen the design tool, rebuild the layout, rewrite the keywords, resize to 2:3, then repost by hand. Pinterpost folds the whole loop into one right-click.
| Step | Reposting by hand | Pinterpost |
|---|---|---|
| Make it different | Re-edit the image yourself | Up to 30 new designs at once |
| Write new copy | Rewrite each caption | Fresh SEO per pin |
| Avoid duplicates | Hope Pinterest doesn't notice | Every pin a distinct design |
| Publish | Repost each one manually | Auto-published to your board |
| Where it runs | An editor plus Pinterest | The page you're already on |
Already have a Canva template? Drop it in as a reference and Pinterpost recreates it into a full batch of on-brand variants, then writes the SEO and publishes them for you.
About a minute. Install Pinterpost, connect Pinterest in one tap, then right-click any pin or image. Your first batch of up to 30 recreated pins is ready in under 60 seconds.
Yes. Each pin in a batch is its own design, layout, and color treatment, not the same image with a new caption. That variety is exactly what keeps a set of pins from reading as duplicates.
Yes. Add a reference image, a Pinterest board style, or a Canva template and Match mode holds your fonts, colors, and layout, so every recreated pin still looks like your brand.
No. Pinterpost redesigns every pin for you, so design skills are optional. If you already have a Canva template, drop it in as a reference and Pinterpost recreates it into on-brand variants.
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 pin. Recreate it into distinct new designs. Auto-publish the batch and keep the traffic coming.
$1 to start · Cancel anytime · Works on Chrome, Edge, Brave