Carousel Studio

Repurpose X Threads into LinkedIn & Instagram Carousels

Canvas & Ratio

Choose your destination platform format


Layout Template

Choose a content structure for your slides


Preset Themes


Typography & Sizing

Title Font Size36px
Body Font Size18px
Header & Footer Size12px

Brand Kit Customization

AGENCY

Configure brand assets for headers & footers

MULTI-PROFILES (AGENCY)
AGENCY
SAVE PRESETS (AGENCY)

Outro Slide CTA

Customize your closing call-to-action slide

#1
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#3

Background Pattern

Source Content

Build Your Carousel

Drag and drop any post card below onto a slide, or use the quick buttons to insert content/images instantly!

Drag Post #1
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

Stop comparing your first draft to someone else’s final. You’re judging your behind-the-scenes against their highlight reel. No one posts the messy drafts, the rewrites, the failed attempts. What looks effortless now was once clunky, uncertain, and full of doubt. And that comparison kills growth before it has a chance to start.

Drag Post #2
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

Every finished book, every perfect speech, every record-breaking performance—once lived as an awkward, uncertain first attempt. But we never see those versions. We only see the highlight reel, not the hard edits, the rewrites, the rough takes that came before.

Drag Post #3
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

We assume Martin Luther King Jr. was just born with his cadence. But he wrote and rewrote his sermons obsessively for years before he learned to trust his flow. We assume great athletes just “have it,” forgetting that every highlight was preceded by hours of missed reps and failed drills. Mastery hides its messy origins.

Drag Post #4
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

Early drafts always feel clunky and lifeless compared to what inspires you. But that’s how it’s supposed to feel. You’re not doing it wrong. The first draft isn’t the finished product. It’s the lump of clay you’ll shape into something meaningful over time.

Drag Post #5
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

The best writers, athletes, and creators learn to live with imperfection longer than everyone else. They know that you don’t create greatness by avoiding mess, you refine it through it. You can’t polish what doesn’t exist.

Drag Post #6
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

I once read the first draft of a bestselling author. It was disjointed, repetitive, and half-baked. But underneath the roughness, you could feel the potential. That experience made me realize the magic was in putting something down so you could mold and shape it over time.

Drag Post #7
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

Comparison can serve as inspiration...until it becomes a trap. If you use others as a benchmark, you’re chasing someone else’s finish line. If you use them as a mirror, you start seeing where you can grow. The goal isn’t to be them. The goal is to keep getting better at being you.

Drag Post #8
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

So much of growth is giving yourself permission to be in the stage you’re in. To sit in the discomfort of being unfinished. To recognize that every messy draft, awkward rep, and flawed attempt is evidence that you’re doing the work. The mess means you’re moving.

Drag Post #9
Steve Magness
@stevemagness

Stop judging your progress against someone else’s polish. No one skips the rough draft—not even the greats. The difference is, they don’t quit when things look ugly. They keep showing up, sentence by sentence, rep by rep, until the draft becomes something worth sharing.