Use case

Orlea for designers

Keep inspiration, UI references, screenshots, articles, and loose visual research in one calm place instead of across tabs, Figma comments, desktop folders, and saved tweets.

What Orlea helps with

Orlea fits design workflows where the work starts with collecting patterns, references, and examples worth revisiting later.

Things worth saving here

UI and interaction references
Screenshot libraries and mood-board material
Articles, tutorials, and product inspiration
Notes about what you like, what to borrow, and what to avoid

Why it fits

Built for visual collection

Design research is not just text. Orlea works well when screenshots, links, notes, and files need to stay visible together.

Less friction than a kanban board

You can save something because it is interesting, not because it needs a status, assignee, or due date.

A calmer reference library

Instead of leaving inspiration trapped in tabs, camera rolls, or Slack threads, you keep it in a workspace designed for revisiting.

Useful next steps

FAQ

Is Orlea a design file tool like Figma?
No. Orlea is the collection layer around the design work: references, screenshots, links, notes, and files you want near the project.
What kinds of design inputs fit best?
Inspiration boards, interaction references, screenshots, articles, competitor examples, and loose concept notes are all a strong fit.
Why not just use a Trello board or Notes app?
Design research is usually more visual and more sprawling than a simple note. Orlea is better when you want screenshots, links, files, and notes to live together.

Keep the useful stuff close.

Download Orlea for macOS and give your references, notes, screenshots, and ideas a place to land.