Holiday Sale – 35% OFF
Limited time offer. Don’t miss it!
Holiday Sale – 35% OFF
Limited time offer. Don’t miss it!

✨ How to Display a Pinterest Feed on Your Website

Mirror App Team
December 12, 2025
Pinterest is not just another visual social network. It is a platform for visual search, planning, and decision-making, where users come not to socialize, but to find ideas and solutions. According to industry analytics for 2024–2025, Pinterest has over 460 million monthly active users, and around 65% of them visit the platform with a clear intent — to find ideas for a purchase, a project, interior design, style inspiration, or travel.

Unlike Instagram or TikTok, Pinterest content doesn’t disappear within hours. A single well-performing pin can drive traffic for weeks or even months, while boards function as visual catalogs and navigation systems. This makes Pinterest closer to search engines and marketplaces than to traditional social feeds.

Who embeds Pinterest feeds on their websites — and why

In practice, Pinterest feeds are most commonly embedded by:
  • eCommerce brands with visual choice mechanics (fashion, interior, décor, jewelry, cosmetics), where Pinterest can generate up to 30–40% of referral traffic from visual collections to product pages;
  • Design and architecture studios, using Pinterest as an extended portfolio and inspiration layer for clients;
  • Lifestyle, travel, and food blogs, to increase time on site and content depth;
  • DIY communities, design schools, and creative agencies, as curated libraries of ideas and references;
  • Local brands and craft businesses, to showcase work and build trust visually.

Geographically, Pinterest is strongest in the US and Europe, shows high engagement in Scandinavia and Japan (especially in home & interior categories), and continues to grow rapidly in Latin America. In categories such as home, fashion, and jewelry, Pinterest consistently ranks among the top inspiration-driven traffic sources worldwide.

That’s why a Pinterest feed on a website is not a “social block” — it is a zone of inspiration and choice. But only if it is structured and aligned with the site’s design.

In 2025, embedding Pinterest is no longer about “showing pins.”
It’s about organizing visual ideas in a way that helps users make decisions instead of getting lost in endless scrolling.

Below is a practical breakdown of how to display a Pinterest feed on your website correctly — and how to do it without code using Mirror App.

💚 Choosing the Right Pinterest Feed Format

The first decision when embedding Pinterest is not technical — it’s structural. Pinterest only starts working when the feed format matches the page’s purpose.

The most effective Pinterest feed formats include:

Board Feed
Best for focused inspiration. Ideal for showcasing a single theme, collection, or moodboard — interiors, styles, recipes, or curated looks.

Profile Feed
Works well for brands and creators with a consistent visual identity. It shows content breadth without losing cohesion.

Pin Carousel
Suitable for featured pins or pages with limited space, where Pinterest acts as a visual accent rather than a full gallery.

Choosing the wrong format creates visual noise. Choosing the right one creates clarity and control.

Mirror App lets you use any of these formats while maintaining full control over:
  • the number of displayed pins;
  • spacing and proportions;
  • responsive behavior across devices.

This allows Pinterest content to support your page structure instead of dominating it.


🎨 Layout Templates and Content Modes — How to Control Pinterest, Not Just Embed It

Pinterest is inherently visual, but without structure it quickly turns into an endless wall of images. That’s why layout templates matter — each one defines a different browsing behavior.

Available layout templates and when to use them

► Square Grid

The most balanced and predictable option. Ideal for moodboards, category pages, and collections.

► Large Grid

Best for visuals that need breathing room — interiors, fashion editorials, hero inspiration blocks.

► Masonry

An organic, editorial-style layout. Works well for blogs and inspiration-driven pages.

► Collage

Designed for visual storytelling and accent sections on landing pages.

► Slider / Carousel / Round Carousel

Compact formats for featured pins, seasonal collections, and promotional highlights.

► List and Small Widget

Minimal formats for sidebars and secondary content areas.
Grids create order, masonry encourages exploration, and sliders guide attention.

☝️ Pins, Boards — or Both in One Widget

Pinterest content can be structured in different content modes, and choosing the right one is often more important than the layout itself.

Modern Pinterest widgets allow you to:
  • display only Pins — when individual ideas matter most;
  • display only Boards — when structure and navigation are the priority;
  • display Pins and Boards in one widget, switching between them via tabs.

This mirrors real Pinterest user behavior:
  • users first explore boards to understand the theme;
  • then dive into pins to find specific ideas.

From a UX perspective, this approach:
  • keeps the interface clean;
  • prevents content overload;
  • gives users control over how they browse.

Mirror App supports all these scenarios without page reloads or heavy scripts.

👑 Visual Customization — Turning Pins into a Designed System

Without customization, a Pinterest feed can easily clash with your site’s typography and grid. Customization turns it from an embed into a designed interface component.

With Mirror App, you can:
  • control grid density and visual rhythm;
  • choose light or dark themes depending on context;
  • limit content volume intentionally;
  • enable automatic updates for new pins;
  • combine multiple boards or profiles into one curated feed.

When done correctly, users don’t perceive the feed as “Pinterest.”
They perceive it as a natural part of your website.

🤝 When Pinterest Feeds Work Best — and When They Don’t

Pinterest feeds perform best when:

  • users are choosing, comparing, or exploring ideas;
  • the website relies on visual decision-making;
  • content can be logically structured into themes and boards;
  • Pinterest acts as a visual navigation layer, not entertainment.

Pinterest feeds are not ideal when:

  • the page requires strict focus on a single action (checkout, form submission, critical CTA);
  • the content is not visual or inspirational by nature;
  • the feed is added “just because others have it,” without a clear use case.

Pinterest enhances a website only when it is embedded intentionally and with control.

🏆 Why Mirror App Is a Practical Choice for Pinterest Feeds

Native Pinterest embeds offer limited customization and often break modern design systems.

Mirror App approaches Pinterest feeds differently:
  • fully responsive widgets by default;
  • multiple layouts without code;
  • precise control over spacing, themes, and content volume;
  • automatic content updates;
  • compatibility with any CMS or HTML-based website.

Mirror App allows Pinterest content to adapt to your website’s design logic, not the other way around.

That’s how a Pinterest feed becomes a strategic visual tool, rather than a decorative element — helping users get inspired, compare options, and make decisions faster.
Did You Like This Article?
FAQ

Our Clients Love Us

  • ★★★★★
    Plenty of visual customization — colors, spacing, fonts. I matched the widget perfectly to my portfolio site without writing CSS. It took me a few minutes to figure out where the shortcode goes in Elementor, but the help guide made it clear.
    Worth it for small businesses or freelancers who want control over design without extra plugins.
  • ★★★★★
    Absolutely awesome widgets! Setup took just a couple of minutes, everything works smoothly and reliably. Social media content displays perfectly. I really love that everything can be customized — I was able to make it look exactly the way I wanted. Definitely recommend!
Other Articles