Canvas: Your Creative Space
Canvas is the creative zone of your mind — where you plan content, design prototypes, and organize everything you produce in one visual space.
Canvas: Your Creative Space
Where ideas take shape
If Memory is what your team knows and Focus is what you're personally working on, Canvas is what you create. It's the zone where you produce things — content, campaigns, designs, prototypes, visual plans.
Canvas gives you a spatial surface to work on: an infinite board where you can place your work, arrange it visually, and see everything in progress at once. It's especially useful when you're working on a project that has multiple pieces that need to fit together.
Two areas inside Canvas
Canvas has two areas:
Boards — Where your creative work happens. Each board is a visual workspace for a project: a content campaign, a product launch, a design prototype, or anything that benefits from a spatial view. You can have as many boards as you like, each named for the work it contains.
Library — Where your reusable resources live. Templates you use often, design components, shared assets like logos and color palettes. Instead of recreating things from scratch, you build up a library over time and use it across your boards.
Everything on one board
A board can hold many kinds of creative output at the same time:
- Content cards — Social media posts, email copy, articles, scripts, or any written piece.
- Prototype cards — Visual designs for landing pages, app screens, or interface mockups. Describe what you want in plain language and AI builds it for you instantly.
- Sticky notes — Short annotations you can pin anywhere on the board. Useful for feedback, reminders, or flagging something that needs attention.
Social media posts, articles, email campaigns, and interface designs can all live in the same board, all visible at once. If you're planning a product launch, you might put the landing page design, the announcement email, and the social campaign all in one board so you can see the whole picture together.
Connecting pieces together
When you want to show how things relate — which screen leads to the next, which content piece supports which campaign goal — you can draw connections between items on the board. Add a label to each line to describe the relationship: "leads to," "supports," "blocks," "next step."
These connectors turn a collection of individual cards into a map of how your work fits together.
Viewing your designs full size
Canvas lets you switch between two ways of looking at your work. In the default view, everything appears as card thumbnails — a compact overview of everything on the board. When you want to focus on a specific design or review it in detail, you can switch to expanded view, where the design fills the space so you can see it as a real screen.
You can toggle between the two at any time, so you get the bird's-eye view when you need it and the full picture when you don't.
A visual way to see your work
Instead of looking at a list of files, Canvas lets you arrange your work spatially. You can:
- Place pieces wherever makes sense to you
- Group related pieces together visually
- Draw connections between items that relate to each other
- Zoom out to see the whole campaign at once
- Zoom in to review a specific piece in detail
This is especially helpful when you're managing a lot of pieces that need to feel coherent — like a multi-platform campaign where everything needs to be consistent in message and timing.
Your library, built over time
The Library area grows as you work. Start by saving a template you'll use again. Add the brand assets that belong in every project. Over time, your Library becomes a toolkit — things you don't have to create from scratch because they're already there, ready to use.
Private to you
Like Focus, Canvas is personal. Your team shares Memory, but Canvas belongs to you. Your creative work is yours to develop, experiment with, and share when you're ready.
Canvas has its own section in this guide
Because Canvas offers a lot to explore — different board types, the Library, prototyping, how to work visually — it gets its own dedicated section later in this guide.
For now, just know that Canvas is the third zone of your mind, and it's where your creative output lives.