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

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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
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

If the goal is to help swimmers go fast, they should not be encouraged to straighten their arm under the water and finish their stroke. It sounds good in theory, but there’s one small problem. The best swimmers don’t do it.

VIDEO
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Drag Post #2
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

Here’s one of the fastest swimmers in history, not fully straightening the arm and not finishing the stroke. Watch carefully. You can see how the elbow exits the water before it’s straightened. More importantly, watch his hand.

Drag Post #3
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

He turns it in, letting go of the water, well before he exits the water, and you can see, his elbow is still very bent when it happens. The goal is to create propulsion for as long as possible without negatively impacting the recovery.

Drag Post #4
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

Once the elbow is brought to the side, there’s not much juice left to squeeze, and it’s to time swing it up. Even in the shortest of events in the highest pressure meets, swimmers are letting go of the water ‘early’. It’s a critical skill for fast swimming.

Drag Post #5
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

One of the simplest ways to help swimmers learn how to hold more water with either the arms or the legs is by using parachutes. They’re simple, they’re practical, and they’re effective.