About
Why Muuree exists.
The shape of the problem, the shape of the answer.
Muuree is an editorial canvas for designers. It's the tool I wanted to use myself, and so far the testers seem to agree.
The shape of the problem.
Moodboarding sits in a strange place. Pinterest is great for collecting but terrible for composing — the grid scrolls you away from the thing you just found. Figma is great for composing but feels like overkill for a mood: you spend more time fighting layers than thinking about color. PDFs are great for delivering but a graveyard for thinking.
Designers I know stitch together three or four tools — Pinterest, Figma, Notion, the camera roll — and pay for the friction in lost references, broken context, and decks that drift from the actual mood.
The shape of the answer.
Muuree treats the moodboard as a first-class artifact. Search, compose, and direct happen in one place. Sharing is a link, not an export. The canvas is editorial by default — typography is Lora italic, the background is paper, and the only color on the page is the warm clay accent. The visual language gets out of the way so the work can show through.
And there's an AI bar — not to generate images, but to direct. "Find me a quiet palette for a Mallorca brand." The model returns a palette, three references, and a starter composition. You take what's useful, discard the rest, and keep moving.
Who builds it.
I'm Daniel Mash — a designer running a studio (mashthelab) since 2017. Muuree is a solo project I started in early 2026 because the tool I wanted didn't exist yet. The first ten testers are friends and clients who let me watch them use it.
If Muuree feels useful, the way you can help is to share it with one designer who'd think the same. The product grows by word.
What it values.
- Restraint. Less chrome, more canvas. The page is allowed to be quiet.
- Editorial. Typography, palette, and composition matter as much as functionality.
- Privacy by default. Local storage works without an account. AI never sees what's on your board.
- Not a feed. The canvas is yours; the work doesn't get recommended.