markdown to linkedin post image

Markdown to LinkedIn Post Image

Make product updates, lessons, and technical notes easier to scan in the LinkedIn feed.

Export settings
md2img

We launched v1

What changed:

  1. Faster exports
  2. Better code blocks
  3. Cleaner templates

Product update to LinkedIn image

Each md2img page is built around a real tool use case. The example above is editable, exportable, and sized through the same renderer as the homepage tool.

How to use this generator

  1. Paste or edit the Markdown in the editor.
  2. Choose the platform size and template that match the channel.
  3. Export a PNG, JPEG, or WebP image directly from your browser.

Best use cases

Turn a product update, hiring note, launch recap, or technical lesson into a polished LinkedIn visual.

Create a lead image for a longer written post so the main point is visible before people expand the text.

Reuse the same Markdown source for a post image, newsletter section, and internal announcement.

Writing tips for better images

  • Use numbered lists when the post explains a sequence or decision process.
  • Prefer one takeaway per image; split longer posts into multiple pages if the preview feels crowded.
  • Avoid tiny code snippets on LinkedIn images unless they are central to the point.

Why Markdown works well for social images

Markdown is compact, portable, and easy to edit. Instead of arranging text boxes by hand, you can write the message once, preview the result, and export an image that keeps the structure of the original note. That makes it useful for creators, developers, founders, educators, and documentation teams who need repeatable visual posts.

The most reliable images are usually short and specific: one heading, one supporting idea, and a few details. When the source Markdown is longer, md2img can split the content into separate export pages instead of making the type too small to read.

Related example formats

These examples show how the same Markdown-to-image workflow adapts to different publishing contexts. Use them as a writing reference before exporting your own image.

Twitter / X 1200x675

Launch announcement

A first image for a product launch post

Open Graph 1200x630

Code snippet

Sharing one useful function, command, or API example

LinkedIn 1200x628

Weekly update

A compact progress recap