Download woodworking boards from Pinterest. Save furniture plans, cut lists, joinery close-ups, and build tutorials. Reference in the workshop where your hands are covered in sawdust and Pinterest doesn't load.
Download Woodworking BoardsWoodworking plans have specific measurements. PinSuite downloads originals so you can actually read "3/4 inch dado, 2 inches deep" from an infographic in the shop.
Your "Furniture", "Shop Jigs", "Outdoor", and "Joinery Techniques" sections download as named folders. Open the folder for what you're building today.
Pin descriptions often include lumber dimensions, tool requirements, and material lists. CSV export captures every specification.
Your own "Projects to Build" board, a woodworker's YouTube-linked portfolio, or a plan site's Pinterest collection. Copy the URL.
Every furniture photo, cut diagram, and build video at original quality. Sections become project-type folders. Dimensions in descriptions are preserved.
Prop your phone on the workbench. Open the plan diagram while cutting. Watch the joinery video between steps. No internet needed in the garage.
| What You Need | Free | Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Save one project photo | ✓ | ✓ |
| Download full project board | — | ✓ |
| Folders by project type | — | ✓ |
| CSV with cut lists/specs | — | ✓ |
| Private board access | — | ✓ |
| Build tutorial videos | ✓ | ✓ |
You can't scroll Pinterest with sawdust on your hands while the table saw is running. Download the plans before you start cutting.
Download Woodworking BoardsWoodworking Pinterest is the most technically demanding niche on the platform. A decorating pin shows you "something pretty." A woodworking pin shows you how to build something with specific dimensions, specific joinery, specific wood species, and specific tools. The information density in a single woodworking plan infographic exceeds any other pin category. And it all needs to be readable at the moment you're standing at a table saw with a piece of oak that costs $12 per board foot.
This makes the workshop offline problem more expensive than any other niche. A misread dimension because the Pinterest thumbnail was too blurry doesn't just ruin the aesthetic. It ruins a piece of lumber. Download the plan at full resolution before you start cutting, and every measurement is clear.
Woodworking Pinterest has a unique content structure. The pin shows a beautiful finished piece (a dining table, a bookshelf, an outdoor bench). The plan with actual dimensions and cut lists lives on the source blog or plan site. The problem is that source links die constantly: woodworking bloggers gate plans behind email signups that no longer work, plan sites restructure their URLs, and free plan PDFs get moved or deleted.
PinSuite downloads the pin image (which often contains a simplified plan diagram or finished photos from multiple angles) and preserves the source URL and description. The description frequently includes overall dimensions, wood species, and the tool list. Even when the source blog dies, you have enough information to reverse-engineer the build or search for the plan by name.
The most useful woodworking boards match how projects get planned and built:
Woodworkers use Pinterest boards at the lumber yard in two ways. First, they reference the project photo to remind themselves what they're building and estimate board feet. Second, they use wood species comparison pins to identify and select the right boards. At a hardwood dealer where walnut, cherry, and maple are stacked in rough-cut slabs, having reference photos of each species at finished quality helps you pick the right wood for the project. PinSuite downloads these references for offline use because lumber yards rarely have wifi.
Woodworking Pinterest naturally segments by skill level, and each level has different reference needs: