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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

Many sprint swimmers fail to achieve the so-called ‘early vertical forearm’. They tend to drop in deep and straight and get there quickly. That’s not a mistake, it’s a deliberate choice to create more speed.

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Drag Post #2
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

While distance swimmers tend to emphasize propulsion in the front half of the stroke, sprinters tend to emphasize the back half of the stroke. Watch the back half here. Pay attention to how much surface area is facing backward and moving backward over a long distance.

Drag Post #3
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

This is where all the speed comes from. Sprinters can take advantage of deeper pulling actions and more torque, all while doing so at fast stroke rates.

Drag Post #4
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

The same principles for creating propulsion still apply, but because the demands of the event have changed, sprinters will use different strategies to make it happen.

Drag Post #5
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

By using the right tools and building them into sprint sets, over and over, swimmers will be given the best opportunity to create propulsion at speed. Follow @andrewksheaff for more on the key skills in swimming, and how to improve them.

Drag Post #6
Andrew Sheaff
@AndrewKSheaff

A systemic approach to development isn’t static. It’s adaptive. It has to be. Swimmers are going to improve, and the better the system, the more they’re going to improve. The system changes the swimmers, and the swimmers change the system.

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