
URL2Mockup
Beautiful device mockups from any URL
23 followers
Beautiful device mockups from any URL
23 followers
Paste a URL, pick a device frame, get a pro mockup in seconds.
No design skills needed - built for designers, developers, and teams.
This is the 2nd launch from URL2Mockup. View more
URL2Mockup
Launched this week
Turn any website URL into beautiful device mockups in seconds. Paste a link, choose laptop, phone, or tablet, and get a presentation-ready mockup instantly. No design tools required.
Free
Launch Team / Built With





@iamvs2002 This is a massive time-saver for landing pages and pitch decks — does it render live URLs dynamically, or does it capture a static screenshot at generation time?
@iamvs2002 @jacklyn_i Static capture vs live render gets gnarly fast. URL2Mockup's paste-a-URL, pick a laptop or mobile frame, then export high-res flow is super clean. The hard part is making JS-heavy pages render the same every time, screen size, pixel density, cookie banners, and load timing. Does it snapshot at export time, or can it refresh later? A capture timestamp plus a render-delay toggle would make it feel dependable.
@jacklyn_i @piroune_balachandran Great points, Piroune...you’re absolutely right about how tricky rendering modern sites can get.
At the moment URL2Mockup generates a snapshot at render time and then places it inside the device frame for export. That keeps the output consistent and fast for things like decks, demos, and portfolios.
Handling JS-heavy pages, screen sizes, and timing reliably is definitely one of the challenges we’ve been thinking about while rebuilding the architecture.
Really like your ideas around:
• capture timestamps
• render delay controls
Those could make the output even more predictable - especially for dynamic pages.
Appreciate the thoughtful feedback 🙌
@jacklyn_i Thanks for checking it out, Jacklyn!
Right now URL2Mockup captures a static screenshot at generation time and places it inside the selected device frame.
The idea was to keep the workflow extremely fast and predictable — paste a URL, render once, and export a clean high-resolution mockup.
Live/dynamic rendering is something we’ve explored, but for most use cases (pitch decks, portfolios, demos) a snapshot tends to work best.
Curious... what kind of use case would you prefer live rendering for?