So, I built Pink Canvas (https://pinkcanvas.net).
The core is simple: a curated library of pink-themed wallpapers. But I wanted to make it genuinely useful, particularly for the tinkerers and creators among us:
Precise Curation: Walls are well-tagged (Kawaii, Floral, Minimalist, Fantasy, etc.) and by resolution (Mobile, Desktop, 4K). It saves the time of sifting through Pinterest or Unsplash for that specific look for a specific device.
Built-in Maker Tools: Here's the key feature and why I'm posting it here. I integrated AI Generate and AI Edit tools directly into the site. You can take any wallpaper and, using natural language, ask it to "add a small cat in the corner" or "make it cyberpunk" to create a unique variant on the fly. It's surprisingly handy for creators who need quick custom graphics or inspiration.
A Growing Library: There's a submission flow. User-modified or created images can be submitted and, after moderation, added to the main library. It's small now, but the vision is for it to grow into a community-curated collection.
Nothing too fancy tech-wise—Vue frontend, Python backend handling image processing and AI API integration. The bigger challenges were building a moderation flow that maintains quality and managing the growing asset library while keeping the site snappy.
I built this partly because my wife could never find a desktop background she liked, but more because I believe tools and aesthetics can merge. Even a niche like "pink," when executed with focus and user empowerment in mind, can be a utility.
I'm very curious to get this community's thoughts, especially on:
What's your take on the value of such aesthetic/consumer-focused tools in a space often dominated by infrastructure tech?
If you used it, what "power-user" or practical features would you want to see in the AI edit tools?
Any advice or lessons on fostering a sustainable, quality UGC community?
Thanks for looking! You can find it here: https://pinkcanvas.net