Built to spark creators—story makers, teachers, and audio storytellers—with picture‑first books, narration, and voice tools. Share in a flipbook‑style reader, export print‑ready PDFs, and turn the same narrative into listenable audio—so illustration inspiration, teaching narratives, and spoken storytelling stay on one workflow instead of three disconnected tools.
We’re looking for early adopters to push the limits of our tool. In exchange for your honest feedback, we’re giving away 20 free credits to everyone who signs up this week!
You can try it here:
https://myimagineer.com/
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neonnoodle•1h ago
- If you're writing picturebooks, which are usually aimed at younger children, you should have a grasp of the appropriate reading level and audience for each book. Browsing through the example books on the site:
- "The Unscripted Symphony" has a writing style and vocabulary completely unsuited to the target audience. Bizarre things start happening in the illustrations toward the end. There's also no real narrative coherence. It's just not a good story.
- "The Gilded Reckoning of Havenwood" is aesthetically very uneven. What time period is this supposed to be taking place? Clothing is all over the place. On page 6, the text says "a grizzled farmer rose," but the illustration shows the character previously identified as the protagonist's mother. As the pages go on, the illustrations actually become funny for how incongruous they are.
Only the last example, "Puddle Play" would pass the most cursory editorial muster for a children's book.
The illustration generation has a lot of the same problems that most AI-generated artwork does, but the text is truly dreadful and only detracts from whatever "value" might be created by the art.