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Design Observer

📖 Essays | 🎙️ Podcasts | 🎟️ Events on design, leadership & culture. A home for curious minds shaping the world.

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posts
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followers
11.2K
following

Sam Furness hates the word hobby. The idea that something central to your life is just an activity that doesn’t go anywhere. He’d know. In 2016, feeling creatively depleted, he spent twelve months doing twelve different things: origami, flight, color, songwriting.

Now he’s built an entire infrastructure to help others invest in their own curiosity, including Release Day: a global collective deadline on May 29th for finishing the creative project you’ve been sitting on.

The world needs what you’re making. Rachel Paese has the story. Link in bio.


170
6
1 weeks ago


Sam Furness hates the word hobby. The idea that something central to your life is just an activity that doesn’t go anywhere. He’d know. In 2016, feeling creatively depleted, he spent twelve months doing twelve different things: origami, flight, color, songwriting.

Now he’s built an entire infrastructure to help others invest in their own curiosity, including Release Day: a global collective deadline on May 29th for finishing the creative project you’ve been sitting on.

The world needs what you’re making. Rachel Paese has the story. Link in bio.


170
6
1 weeks ago

Sam Furness hates the word hobby. The idea that something central to your life is just an activity that doesn’t go anywhere. He’d know. In 2016, feeling creatively depleted, he spent twelve months doing twelve different things: origami, flight, color, songwriting.

Now he’s built an entire infrastructure to help others invest in their own curiosity, including Release Day: a global collective deadline on May 29th for finishing the creative project you’ve been sitting on.

The world needs what you’re making. Rachel Paese has the story. Link in bio.


170
6
1 weeks ago

Sam Furness hates the word hobby. The idea that something central to your life is just an activity that doesn’t go anywhere. He’d know. In 2016, feeling creatively depleted, he spent twelve months doing twelve different things: origami, flight, color, songwriting.

Now he’s built an entire infrastructure to help others invest in their own curiosity, including Release Day: a global collective deadline on May 29th for finishing the creative project you’ve been sitting on.

The world needs what you’re making. Rachel Paese has the story. Link in bio.


170
6
1 weeks ago

Sam Furness hates the word hobby. The idea that something central to your life is just an activity that doesn’t go anywhere. He’d know. In 2016, feeling creatively depleted, he spent twelve months doing twelve different things: origami, flight, color, songwriting.

Now he’s built an entire infrastructure to help others invest in their own curiosity, including Release Day: a global collective deadline on May 29th for finishing the creative project you’ve been sitting on.

The world needs what you’re making. Rachel Paese has the story. Link in bio.


170
6
1 weeks ago

Lines on a map determine who holds power. Who gets heard. Who gets erased.

Draw the Line is a new 10-part podcast from Design Observer, hosted by Ellen McGirt. It begins in Louisiana, where a battle over redrawn congressional district maps made its way to the Supreme Court — part of a broader unraveling of the Voting Rights Act that has fundamentally redesigned the architecture of American voting rights.

At Design Observer, we've spent over two decades examining how design decisions shape the world around us: the built environment, visual culture, and the systems we move through every day.

This series turns that same lens on American democracy, where the act of drawing a line on a map carries consequences that reach into every community in this country.

Coming soon, wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to our newsletter for updates, link in bio.


20
1
6 days ago

Lines on a map determine who holds power. Who gets heard. Who gets erased.

Draw the Line is a new 10-part podcast from Design Observer, hosted by Ellen McGirt. It begins in Louisiana, where a battle over redrawn congressional district maps made its way to the Supreme Court — part of a broader unraveling of the Voting Rights Act that has fundamentally redesigned the architecture of American voting rights.

At Design Observer, we've spent over two decades examining how design decisions shape the world around us: the built environment, visual culture, and the systems we move through every day.

This series turns that same lens on American democracy, where the act of drawing a line on a map carries consequences that reach into every community in this country.

Coming soon, wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to our newsletter for updates, link in bio.


20
1
6 days ago

Lines on a map determine who holds power. Who gets heard. Who gets erased.

Draw the Line is a new 10-part podcast from Design Observer, hosted by Ellen McGirt. It begins in Louisiana, where a battle over redrawn congressional district maps made its way to the Supreme Court — part of a broader unraveling of the Voting Rights Act that has fundamentally redesigned the architecture of American voting rights.

At Design Observer, we've spent over two decades examining how design decisions shape the world around us: the built environment, visual culture, and the systems we move through every day.

This series turns that same lens on American democracy, where the act of drawing a line on a map carries consequences that reach into every community in this country.

Coming soon, wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to our newsletter for updates, link in bio.


20
1
6 days ago


Lines on a map determine who holds power. Who gets heard. Who gets erased.

Draw the Line is a new 10-part podcast from Design Observer, hosted by Ellen McGirt. It begins in Louisiana, where a battle over redrawn congressional district maps made its way to the Supreme Court — part of a broader unraveling of the Voting Rights Act that has fundamentally redesigned the architecture of American voting rights.

At Design Observer, we've spent over two decades examining how design decisions shape the world around us: the built environment, visual culture, and the systems we move through every day.

This series turns that same lens on American democracy, where the act of drawing a line on a map carries consequences that reach into every community in this country.

Coming soon, wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to our newsletter for updates, link in bio.


20
1
6 days ago

Generative AI is everywhere in design, writing, and media, but what does it do to our thinking?

In a new essay, David Z. Morris explores how AI-generated images and text are not only simplifying aesthetics, but also shaping attention, creativity, and personal identity.

“Suddenly everyone’s life got a lot more similar,” he writes, a warning about the hidden costs of a technology some assume is liberating.

Read the full essay at the 🔗in bio.


412
17
4 months ago

Generative AI is everywhere in design, writing, and media, but what does it do to our thinking?

In a new essay, David Z. Morris explores how AI-generated images and text are not only simplifying aesthetics, but also shaping attention, creativity, and personal identity.

“Suddenly everyone’s life got a lot more similar,” he writes, a warning about the hidden costs of a technology some assume is liberating.

Read the full essay at the 🔗in bio.


412
17
4 months ago

Generative AI is everywhere in design, writing, and media, but what does it do to our thinking?

In a new essay, David Z. Morris explores how AI-generated images and text are not only simplifying aesthetics, but also shaping attention, creativity, and personal identity.

“Suddenly everyone’s life got a lot more similar,” he writes, a warning about the hidden costs of a technology some assume is liberating.

Read the full essay at the 🔗in bio.


412
17
4 months ago

What if the most important design principle you’ve never heard of has been practiced in the Andes for centuries?

Ayni is the Quechua word for reciprocity — a living principle of mutual care that asks a simple but profound question: what will we choose to give back?

Martín Zabaleta went to Peru’s Sacred Valley to find out what it means for design. Link in bio.


21
1
1 days ago

What if the most important design principle you’ve never heard of has been practiced in the Andes for centuries?

Ayni is the Quechua word for reciprocity — a living principle of mutual care that asks a simple but profound question: what will we choose to give back?

Martín Zabaleta went to Peru’s Sacred Valley to find out what it means for design. Link in bio.


21
1
1 days ago

What if the most important design principle you’ve never heard of has been practiced in the Andes for centuries?

Ayni is the Quechua word for reciprocity — a living principle of mutual care that asks a simple but profound question: what will we choose to give back?

Martín Zabaleta went to Peru’s Sacred Valley to find out what it means for design. Link in bio.


21
1
1 days ago


What if the most important design principle you’ve never heard of has been practiced in the Andes for centuries?

Ayni is the Quechua word for reciprocity — a living principle of mutual care that asks a simple but profound question: what will we choose to give back?

Martín Zabaleta went to Peru’s Sacred Valley to find out what it means for design. Link in bio.


21
1
1 days ago

For a decade, businesses optimized for efficiency. Cut the creatives. Automated the customer. Chased the quarterly number.

Now they're vulnerable in ways most of them haven't even clocked yet.

Stephen Fritz argues this is exactly the moment design has been waiting for. That designers need to show up boldly, maybe without permission, and with something concrete to say.

This is our moment. Full piece linked in bio.


18
2
1 weeks ago

For a decade, businesses optimized for efficiency. Cut the creatives. Automated the customer. Chased the quarterly number.

Now they're vulnerable in ways most of them haven't even clocked yet.

Stephen Fritz argues this is exactly the moment design has been waiting for. That designers need to show up boldly, maybe without permission, and with something concrete to say.

This is our moment. Full piece linked in bio.


18
2
1 weeks ago

For a decade, businesses optimized for efficiency. Cut the creatives. Automated the customer. Chased the quarterly number.

Now they're vulnerable in ways most of them haven't even clocked yet.

Stephen Fritz argues this is exactly the moment design has been waiting for. That designers need to show up boldly, maybe without permission, and with something concrete to say.

This is our moment. Full piece linked in bio.


18
2
1 weeks ago

For a decade, businesses optimized for efficiency. Cut the creatives. Automated the customer. Chased the quarterly number.

Now they're vulnerable in ways most of them haven't even clocked yet.

Stephen Fritz argues this is exactly the moment design has been waiting for. That designers need to show up boldly, maybe without permission, and with something concrete to say.

This is our moment. Full piece linked in bio.


18
2
1 weeks ago

What does it feel like to stand in front of art and not know if a human made it?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, that wasn't a hypothetical.

Swipe through and decide for yourself: human or machine? Then head to the full piece to find out — and why the answer might matter less than you think. Link in bio.

(Photo creds, respectively: Kevin Abosch, Art Blocks, Asprey Studio, Kajsa Kedefors)


4
1 weeks ago


What does it feel like to stand in front of art and not know if a human made it?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, that wasn't a hypothetical.

Swipe through and decide for yourself: human or machine? Then head to the full piece to find out — and why the answer might matter less than you think. Link in bio.

(Photo creds, respectively: Kevin Abosch, Art Blocks, Asprey Studio, Kajsa Kedefors)


4
1 weeks ago

What does it feel like to stand in front of art and not know if a human made it?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, that wasn't a hypothetical.

Swipe through and decide for yourself: human or machine? Then head to the full piece to find out — and why the answer might matter less than you think. Link in bio.

(Photo creds, respectively: Kevin Abosch, Art Blocks, Asprey Studio, Kajsa Kedefors)


4
1 weeks ago

What does it feel like to stand in front of art and not know if a human made it?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, that wasn't a hypothetical.

Swipe through and decide for yourself: human or machine? Then head to the full piece to find out — and why the answer might matter less than you think. Link in bio.

(Photo creds, respectively: Kevin Abosch, Art Blocks, Asprey Studio, Kajsa Kedefors)


4
1 weeks ago

“For brands that really want to be understood in a deep way, it takes other humans to make a thoughtful effort.”
Jennifer Jerde has been running @elxrdsgn in San Francisco for 27 years. She founded the firm in 1992. The origin story involves a dog, a $6-an-hour internship, and a teacher who asked the right question at the right time. In an industry increasingly tempted by shortcuts, that’s a quiet kind of radical. Rachel Paese paid her a visit. Link in bio.


53
3
1 weeks ago

“For brands that really want to be understood in a deep way, it takes other humans to make a thoughtful effort.”
Jennifer Jerde has been running @elxrdsgn in San Francisco for 27 years. She founded the firm in 1992. The origin story involves a dog, a $6-an-hour internship, and a teacher who asked the right question at the right time. In an industry increasingly tempted by shortcuts, that’s a quiet kind of radical. Rachel Paese paid her a visit. Link in bio.


53
3
1 weeks ago

“For brands that really want to be understood in a deep way, it takes other humans to make a thoughtful effort.”
Jennifer Jerde has been running @elxrdsgn in San Francisco for 27 years. She founded the firm in 1992. The origin story involves a dog, a $6-an-hour internship, and a teacher who asked the right question at the right time. In an industry increasingly tempted by shortcuts, that’s a quiet kind of radical. Rachel Paese paid her a visit. Link in bio.


53
3
1 weeks ago

“For brands that really want to be understood in a deep way, it takes other humans to make a thoughtful effort.”
Jennifer Jerde has been running @elxrdsgn in San Francisco for 27 years. She founded the firm in 1992. The origin story involves a dog, a $6-an-hour internship, and a teacher who asked the right question at the right time. In an industry increasingly tempted by shortcuts, that’s a quiet kind of radical. Rachel Paese paid her a visit. Link in bio.


53
3
1 weeks ago

“For brands that really want to be understood in a deep way, it takes other humans to make a thoughtful effort.”
Jennifer Jerde has been running @elxrdsgn in San Francisco for 27 years. She founded the firm in 1992. The origin story involves a dog, a $6-an-hour internship, and a teacher who asked the right question at the right time. In an industry increasingly tempted by shortcuts, that’s a quiet kind of radical. Rachel Paese paid her a visit. Link in bio.


53
3
1 weeks ago

"What if design isn't solely about innovation, but about remembering?"

That's the question Laura Sofia Cardozo took away from Murmur Ring's Reclaiming Value immersion in Peru's Sacred Valley — and it's reshaping how she thinks about design entirely. Cardozo's work is rooted in multigenerational memory: the idea that the decisions we make today should serve communities seven generations into the future.

Her question for designers: How do we design for continuity when the systems around us are structured for fragmentation?

This is part of our ongoing series exploring design lessons from Peru's Sacred Valley. Each installment, the conversation goes deeper. What wisdom from your own community, culture, or ancestors informs the work you do? Comment or send us a DM.

Link to the ongoing series is in our bio. More to come.

Courtesy Jack DeMarzo for Murmur Ring.


6
2 weeks ago

What do these three images have in common?

They’re all part of a revival. A reaction to the industrial revolution, a recession, or now, the failed promise of big tech.

Strategists are proclaiming 2026 to be the year of nostalgia. Wired headphones, workwear (back, so soon), medievalcore, landlines for kids, #90s TikTok.

But for brands to get ahead, this isn’t just a trend — it’s a revival.

Read the opinion piece Athletics Senior Strategy Director Matt Colangelo. Link in our bio.

Credit: Arturo Añez via Unsplash


13
2 weeks ago

What do these three images have in common?

They’re all part of a revival. A reaction to the industrial revolution, a recession, or now, the failed promise of big tech.

Strategists are proclaiming 2026 to be the year of nostalgia. Wired headphones, workwear (back, so soon), medievalcore, landlines for kids, #90s TikTok.

But for brands to get ahead, this isn’t just a trend — it’s a revival.

Read the opinion piece Athletics Senior Strategy Director Matt Colangelo. Link in our bio.

Credit: Arturo Añez via Unsplash


13
2 weeks ago

What do these three images have in common?

They’re all part of a revival. A reaction to the industrial revolution, a recession, or now, the failed promise of big tech.

Strategists are proclaiming 2026 to be the year of nostalgia. Wired headphones, workwear (back, so soon), medievalcore, landlines for kids, #90s TikTok.

But for brands to get ahead, this isn’t just a trend — it’s a revival.

Read the opinion piece Athletics Senior Strategy Director Matt Colangelo. Link in our bio.

Credit: Arturo Añez via Unsplash


13
2 weeks ago

New technology threatens to replace yet another existing cultural order. It's a story as old as the Moog synthesizer. As old as the first photograph. As old as an electric guitar plugged into an amp.

The question was never whether things would change. It's who gets to shape what comes next.

Swipe for some historical perspective. Full piece in our newsletter. Link in bio.

Photo Credit: Roger Pic via Wikimedia Commons


14
2 weeks ago

New technology threatens to replace yet another existing cultural order. It's a story as old as the Moog synthesizer. As old as the first photograph. As old as an electric guitar plugged into an amp.

The question was never whether things would change. It's who gets to shape what comes next.

Swipe for some historical perspective. Full piece in our newsletter. Link in bio.

Photo Credit: Roger Pic via Wikimedia Commons


14
2 weeks ago

New technology threatens to replace yet another existing cultural order. It's a story as old as the Moog synthesizer. As old as the first photograph. As old as an electric guitar plugged into an amp.

The question was never whether things would change. It's who gets to shape what comes next.

Swipe for some historical perspective. Full piece in our newsletter. Link in bio.

Photo Credit: Roger Pic via Wikimedia Commons


14
2 weeks ago

New technology threatens to replace yet another existing cultural order. It's a story as old as the Moog synthesizer. As old as the first photograph. As old as an electric guitar plugged into an amp.

The question was never whether things would change. It's who gets to shape what comes next.

Swipe for some historical perspective. Full piece in our newsletter. Link in bio.

Photo Credit: Roger Pic via Wikimedia Commons


14
2 weeks ago

New technology threatens to replace yet another existing cultural order. It's a story as old as the Moog synthesizer. As old as the first photograph. As old as an electric guitar plugged into an amp.

The question was never whether things would change. It's who gets to shape what comes next.

Swipe for some historical perspective. Full piece in our newsletter. Link in bio.

Photo Credit: Roger Pic via Wikimedia Commons


14
2 weeks ago

New technology threatens to replace yet another existing cultural order. It's a story as old as the Moog synthesizer. As old as the first photograph. As old as an electric guitar plugged into an amp.

The question was never whether things would change. It's who gets to shape what comes next.

Swipe for some historical perspective. Full piece in our newsletter. Link in bio.

Photo Credit: Roger Pic via Wikimedia Commons


14
2 weeks ago

New technology threatens to replace yet another existing cultural order. It's a story as old as the Moog synthesizer. As old as the first photograph. As old as an electric guitar plugged into an amp.

The question was never whether things would change. It's who gets to shape what comes next.

Swipe for some historical perspective. Full piece in our newsletter. Link in bio.

Photo Credit: Roger Pic via Wikimedia Commons


14
2 weeks ago

An AI machine showed up at Art Basel. Scanned the crowd. Read their emotions. And started making art in real time.

Its name is Botto. It has no body, no studio, no artistic angst. It sold a piece at auction for over $333,000.

So what does that do to our definition of art — or the artist?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, Kajsa Kedefors talked to the artists who embrace AI, the ones who compare it to “an annoying intern,” and the ones somewhere in between. What they all keep circling back to: intent, effort, and the human gesture still matter.

Swipe to hear directly from the artists. Full piece linked in bio.

(Photo 1: Courtesy of BottoDAO. Photo 2 + 3: Courtesy of Root K. Photo 3 + Video Courtesy of Kajsa Kedefors.)


26
1
3 weeks ago

An AI machine showed up at Art Basel. Scanned the crowd. Read their emotions. And started making art in real time.

Its name is Botto. It has no body, no studio, no artistic angst. It sold a piece at auction for over $333,000.

So what does that do to our definition of art — or the artist?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, Kajsa Kedefors talked to the artists who embrace AI, the ones who compare it to “an annoying intern,” and the ones somewhere in between. What they all keep circling back to: intent, effort, and the human gesture still matter.

Swipe to hear directly from the artists. Full piece linked in bio.

(Photo 1: Courtesy of BottoDAO. Photo 2 + 3: Courtesy of Root K. Photo 3 + Video Courtesy of Kajsa Kedefors.)


26
1
3 weeks ago

An AI machine showed up at Art Basel. Scanned the crowd. Read their emotions. And started making art in real time.

Its name is Botto. It has no body, no studio, no artistic angst. It sold a piece at auction for over $333,000.

So what does that do to our definition of art — or the artist?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, Kajsa Kedefors talked to the artists who embrace AI, the ones who compare it to “an annoying intern,” and the ones somewhere in between. What they all keep circling back to: intent, effort, and the human gesture still matter.

Swipe to hear directly from the artists. Full piece linked in bio.

(Photo 1: Courtesy of BottoDAO. Photo 2 + 3: Courtesy of Root K. Photo 3 + Video Courtesy of Kajsa Kedefors.)


26
1
3 weeks ago

An AI machine showed up at Art Basel. Scanned the crowd. Read their emotions. And started making art in real time.

Its name is Botto. It has no body, no studio, no artistic angst. It sold a piece at auction for over $333,000.

So what does that do to our definition of art — or the artist?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, Kajsa Kedefors talked to the artists who embrace AI, the ones who compare it to “an annoying intern,” and the ones somewhere in between. What they all keep circling back to: intent, effort, and the human gesture still matter.

Swipe to hear directly from the artists. Full piece linked in bio.

(Photo 1: Courtesy of BottoDAO. Photo 2 + 3: Courtesy of Root K. Photo 3 + Video Courtesy of Kajsa Kedefors.)


26
1
3 weeks ago

An AI machine showed up at Art Basel. Scanned the crowd. Read their emotions. And started making art in real time.

Its name is Botto. It has no body, no studio, no artistic angst. It sold a piece at auction for over $333,000.

So what does that do to our definition of art — or the artist?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, Kajsa Kedefors talked to the artists who embrace AI, the ones who compare it to “an annoying intern,” and the ones somewhere in between. What they all keep circling back to: intent, effort, and the human gesture still matter.

Swipe to hear directly from the artists. Full piece linked in bio.

(Photo 1: Courtesy of BottoDAO. Photo 2 + 3: Courtesy of Root K. Photo 3 + Video Courtesy of Kajsa Kedefors.)


26
1
3 weeks ago

An AI machine showed up at Art Basel. Scanned the crowd. Read their emotions. And started making art in real time.

Its name is Botto. It has no body, no studio, no artistic angst. It sold a piece at auction for over $333,000.

So what does that do to our definition of art — or the artist?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, Kajsa Kedefors talked to the artists who embrace AI, the ones who compare it to “an annoying intern,” and the ones somewhere in between. What they all keep circling back to: intent, effort, and the human gesture still matter.

Swipe to hear directly from the artists. Full piece linked in bio.

(Photo 1: Courtesy of BottoDAO. Photo 2 + 3: Courtesy of Root K. Photo 3 + Video Courtesy of Kajsa Kedefors.)


26
1
3 weeks ago

An AI machine showed up at Art Basel. Scanned the crowd. Read their emotions. And started making art in real time.

Its name is Botto. It has no body, no studio, no artistic angst. It sold a piece at auction for over $333,000.

So what does that do to our definition of art — or the artist?

At Art Basel Hong Kong, Kajsa Kedefors talked to the artists who embrace AI, the ones who compare it to “an annoying intern,” and the ones somewhere in between. What they all keep circling back to: intent, effort, and the human gesture still matter.

Swipe to hear directly from the artists. Full piece linked in bio.

(Photo 1: Courtesy of BottoDAO. Photo 2 + 3: Courtesy of Root K. Photo 3 + Video Courtesy of Kajsa Kedefors.)


26
1
3 weeks ago

Landlines. Wired headphones. Medievalcore. Strategists are calling 2026 the year of nostalgia, and they're not wrong. Our latest piece argues the nostalgia wave is a symptom of something bigger. A generation of broken promises from big tech, and a culture quietly looking for the exit.

For brands that want to get ahead, Matt Colangelo shares four counterintuitive pieces of advice: think anti-optimally, craft honestly, communicate humbly, and frame things historically.

Want to read the full piece? Link in bio.


28
4 weeks ago

Landlines. Wired headphones. Medievalcore. Strategists are calling 2026 the year of nostalgia, and they're not wrong. Our latest piece argues the nostalgia wave is a symptom of something bigger. A generation of broken promises from big tech, and a culture quietly looking for the exit.

For brands that want to get ahead, Matt Colangelo shares four counterintuitive pieces of advice: think anti-optimally, craft honestly, communicate humbly, and frame things historically.

Want to read the full piece? Link in bio.


28
4 weeks ago

Landlines. Wired headphones. Medievalcore. Strategists are calling 2026 the year of nostalgia, and they're not wrong. Our latest piece argues the nostalgia wave is a symptom of something bigger. A generation of broken promises from big tech, and a culture quietly looking for the exit.

For brands that want to get ahead, Matt Colangelo shares four counterintuitive pieces of advice: think anti-optimally, craft honestly, communicate humbly, and frame things historically.

Want to read the full piece? Link in bio.


28
4 weeks ago

Landlines. Wired headphones. Medievalcore. Strategists are calling 2026 the year of nostalgia, and they're not wrong. Our latest piece argues the nostalgia wave is a symptom of something bigger. A generation of broken promises from big tech, and a culture quietly looking for the exit.

For brands that want to get ahead, Matt Colangelo shares four counterintuitive pieces of advice: think anti-optimally, craft honestly, communicate humbly, and frame things historically.

Want to read the full piece? Link in bio.


28
4 weeks ago


스토리 세이브 - 스토리, 릴스, 사진, 비디오, 하이라이트, IGTV를 핸드폰에 저장할 수 있는 최고의 무료 도구.

스토리-세이브.com은 사용자들이 인스타그램에서 스토리, 사진, 비디오, IGTV 등을 직접 다운로드하고 저장할 수 있게 도와주는 직관적인 온라인 도구입니다. Story-Save를 사용하면 인스타그램에서 다양한 콘텐츠를 쉽게 다운로드하고 인터넷 없이도 편리하게 볼 수 있습니다. 인스타그램에서 흥미로운 내용을 발견하고 나중에 보기 위해 저장하고 싶을 때 이 도구가 완벽합니다. Story-Save를 사용하여 인스타그램의 소중한 순간을 놓치지 마세요!

우리의 장점:

회원가입 불필요

앱 다운로드 및 가입 없이, 웹에서 스토리를 저장하세요.

독점적인 고화질

저화질 콘텐츠는 이제 그만, 고해상도 스토리만 보존하세요.

모든 장치에서 접근 가능

모든 브라우저, 아이폰, 안드로이드에서 인스타그램 스토리를 다운로드하세요.

완전 무료 사용

전혀 비용 없이 스토리를 다운로드할 수 있습니다.

자주 묻는 질문

인스타그램 스토리 다운로드 기능은 인스타그램 스토리를 안전하고 고품질로 다운로드할 수 있는 방법을 제공합니다. 사용자 친화적이며, 가입 없이 사용 가능합니다. 링크를 복사하여 붙여넣고 콘텐츠를 즐기세요.
인스타그램 스토리 다운로드는 간단한 과정으로, 세 가지 단계가 필요합니다:
  • 1. 인스타그램 스토리 다운로드 도구에 접속하세요.
  • 2. 인스타그램 프로필의 사용자명을 제공된 필드에 입력하고 다운로드 버튼을 클릭하세요.
  • 3. 현재 24시간 동안 사용 가능한 모든 스토리가 표시됩니다. 원하는 스토리를 선택하고 다운로드하세요.
선택한 스토리는 빠르게 기기의 로컬 저장소에 저장됩니다.
불행히도 개인 계정의 스토리는 개인정보 보호 정책으로 인해 다운로드할 수 없습니다.
인스타그램 스토리 다운로드 서비스에는 사용 횟수 제한이 없습니다. 무제한으로 무료로 사용 가능합니다.
네, 다른 사용자의 인스타그램 스토리를 다운로드하고 저장하는 것은 상업적 용도가 아닌 한 합법입니다. 상업적 용도로 사용하려면 원래 콘텐츠 소유자로부터 허락을 받고, 매번 스토리를 사용할 때마다 출처를 밝혀야 합니다.
다운로드한 스토리는 일반적으로 컴퓨터의 다운로드 폴더에 저장됩니다. 윈도우, 맥, iOS 모두 동일합니다. 모바일 장치에서는 스토리가 핸드폰 저장소에 저장되며, 다운로드 후 바로 갤러리 앱에 나타납니다.