A link in bio is too little. A website is too much.
Build a
magazine instead — no designer, no decisions, one sitting.
Most visual businesses are stuck somewhere in between.
You organized your Highlights into "Menu" and "Prices" and you're calling it a website. But your best work is buried under selfies and Stories that vanish in 24 hours.
When someone asks what you do, you send them a link page. They see six buttons, tap none, and leave. No photos, no prices, no reason to stay.
The Squarespace trial expired. The freelancer quoted too much. You're still sending a PDF over WhatsApp and telling yourself you'll sort it properly — eventually.
Bouqlet turns your photos, prices, and story into a swipeable, full-screen magazine — the thing you send when someone asks what you do. One slide per idea. Looks sharp on any phone. Ready to share in one sitting.
Each page is its own visual moment, not a wall of text. Your photos lead. Your story follows.
Every layout adapts automatically, nothing breaks. Looks sharp on any screen, straight out of the box.
You're arranging content, not learning software. Pick a template, drop in your work, share the link.
These are real, working magazines — open any card and swipe through it the way your customers would. They're hand-built references showing what's possible. Your own magazine is almost ready to launch — and when it does, you'll be able to publish yours in a single sitting.
Browse layouts built for visual businesses. Every template looks sharp on any device, straight out of the box.
Add your photos, write your prices, and tell your story. No coding, no design decisions — just your work in the right places.
Drop it in your bio, send it on WhatsApp, or print it on a business card. Or connect your own domain and make it fully yours.
No tutorial. No learning curve. If you can post a Story, you can publish a magazine.
No hidden fees. No contracts. Cancel anytime.
I run a cafe discovery platform in Dubai. One afternoon I met Yana — the founder of a coffee house with a 10/10 rating, genuine regulars, and no website. Just an Instagram and a link in bio.
Her work was stunning. Sitting across from her, we started asking the same question: what if there was an online magazine to showcase her work — without building a website? Something unique, customer-friendly, and simple enough for anyone to use.
I built Bouqlet because I kept meeting businesses like hers. Beautiful work, no stage to show it. A magazine felt right — curated, visual, fast. Something you'd actually be proud to share.
If that sounds like you, you're exactly who this is for.
— Alex Kadyrov, Founder of Bouqlet & KofeVibe
Perfect for cafés, nail artists, barbers, florists, and every business that sells with visuals.