Docs How-To Guides Add a blog

Add a blog

A blog lets you post updates, news, and articles frequently without touching the page builder. There is nothing to set up first: you write a post, and the blog appears. Writing a post is deliberately simple — a title, a cover image, and a body. Posts are clean reading pages, not cinematic screens.

Writing a post

  • In the page grid (where all your pages and posts are managed),
  • click New Post.

  • The Post editor opens. It has three things:
  • - Cover image — click the image area to upload one. It becomes the card thumbnail in the blog index and the banner on the post. - Title — the post headline. - Body — the article text, with a small formatting toolbar: Bold, Heading, List, and Link.

  • Click Save draft to keep working, or Publish to make it live.
  • Images you add are resized and converted to a fast web format automatically, so a photo straight off a phone will not slow the page down.


    The blog appears on its own

    The first time you publish a post, two things happen automatically:

    • Your /blog page is created, listing your posts newest-first as
    • cards (cover, date, title, excerpt).

    • A Blog link is added to the site navigation.

    You never build the blog page or place an index block yourself — it is created and kept up to date for you. Each post also gets its own clean reading page at its own URL.


    Managing posts

    Posts live in the page grid alongside your pages, behind a Posts filter tab so they do not clutter the page list. Click the Posts tab to see just your posts; click any post to reopen it in the Post editor.

    • Draft posts are saved but not shown publicly.
    • Published posts are live and listed in the blog.

    Do

    • Keep a post to one topic with a strong title and a good cover image.
    • Use the Heading and List formatting to break up long posts.
    • Publish often — the index always shows the newest posts first.

    Don't

    • Don't look for a "blog" page to build or a block to drag — publishing
    • a post sets all of that up for you.

    • Don't try to add screens, environments, or reveal effects to a post —
    • posts are plain reading pages by design.


    Related

    • blocks/posts — the blog index and its settings
    • concepts/page-structure — how regular (non-post) pages are built