Muuree turns the moodboard from a scrollable archive into a composable canvas. You search, you arrange, you ask, you share. Same flow you already have — done in one place.

01 · Search

Pull from anywhere.

The AI bar at the top of the canvas searches Unsplash, Pexels, and Pixabay in parallel. Switch sources without losing your query, drag any thumbnail straight onto the canvas, and the attribution stays attached automatically. No tab-switching, no losing your place — it's the same field you type into to ask Muuree for something else.

For the references that live outside stock libraries (your own files, screenshots, fabric scans), drag-drop or paste into the canvas. Muuree treats them the same as searched images.

02 · Compose

A canvas, not a feed.

Every element is a manipulable object: drag, align, group, multi-select, distribute. The cursor work feels like Figma — single-element drag with direct DOM mutation, multi-select with shift-click or marquee, and a floating toolbar appears when you have more than one item selected.

What separates Muuree from Pinterest is the verb. Pinterest collects. Muuree composes. The shapes, palettes, type cards, sticky notes, and connector lines exist because mood needs structure, not just stack.

03 · Direct

AI as your concept director.

Type a brief into Ask Muuree and the AI responds with a palette, a small set of references, or a composition idea — whatever the query implies. It doesn't generate images. It directs what you find and how you arrange them, which is the part of moodboarding that usually takes the most time and looks the most like editorial work.

Bring your own key (Groq, Gemini, or Claude) or use the hosted free tier. The model never sees your existing board — only what you ask. Privacy by default.

04 · Share

Feedback where the work lives.

One link sends the entire board. Collaborators see live cursors as they review, and they comment anchored to the element they're talking about — not in a separate thread, not in a PDF margin. The board updates in place; the conversation stays attached to the visual.

For finished decks, export to PDF — the moodboard becomes a presentable artifact without rebuilding it in Keynote.