Launching our LinkedIn carousel generator
Decks turns a short brief into a 4:5, on-brand carousel you can proof and post — the same flow we use at decks.tryfuchka.com.
LinkedIn carousels work because the feed rewards scroll-stopping structure: one idea per slide, a clear through-line, and visuals that read at a glance. They also fail quietly — blurry exports, off-brand colors, and copy that sounds like a slide deck instead of a post.
We built Decks to close that gap. It is live at decks.tryfuchka.com.
What it does
You start with a founder-sized brief: who it is for, the claim you are willing to defend, and any proof you already have. Decks turns that into a polished 4:5 carousel — the aspect ratio that reads cleanly in LinkedIn’s feed — with editorial typography, on-brand color, and copy you can actually post without rewriting it into “social voice” afterward.
The output is meant to be proof-ready: you should be able to skim slide order, tighten a headline, and ship — not rebuild the whole thing in a generic design tool.
Why we cared about 4:5 and type
Carousels are not PDFs. If the type hierarchy is wrong or the margins fight the safe area, people bounce before slide two. We optimized for in-feed legibility first, then brand: your palette and tone should feel like you, not like a template someone else’s company used last week.
Generate your first carousel
- Build your deck in minutes, not hours — stop burning time in design tools. Decks takes you from blank page to polished carousel faster than it takes to format a slide manually.
- Describe what you want to say — write out the idea, paste a URL, or drop in multiple links. Decks pulls the content and shapes it into a narrative so you don't have to start from scratch.
- Set the style — describe a look or borrow the aesthetic from a creator whose content already works. Decks applies it consistently across every slide.
- Pick an aspect ratio — choose the format that fits your platform. The right ratio means your slides fill the screen and nothing gets cropped out on someone's phone.
- Add images from Unsplash — pull in photography that fits the mood. You can swap any image out later once you see how the full deck comes together.
- Set your slide count and generate — eight to ten slides is the sweet spot: enough room to build an argument, short enough that people finish. Hit generate when you're ready.
- Download when it's good — export as a PDF or a set of images the moment the deck lands right. No friction between done and posted.
- Edit until it's yours — not happy with something? Jump into design mode and adjust the copy, shift the colors, resize elements, or swap background images. The tools are there; use as many or as few as you need.
Beyond LinkedIn
The same format works wherever vertical, swipeable stories show up. We surface LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, and Threads in the product because the job is the same even when the algorithm isn’t: go-to-market without the noise — fewer tools, fewer handoffs, one artifact you can iterate on.
What’s next
Decks is the first slice of how we think about assets that outbound and content share: something specific enough to send, polished enough to post. If you try the generator and hit a wall — brand rules we should respect, a slide pattern you wish existed, an export that isn’t quite right — we want to hear it. That feedback is what turns a demo into a workflow.
