Not every piece starts out as a final render—and now your Kylee profile can reflect that.
We’re rolling out Work in Progress (WIP) posts, a new way for artists to share early versions, drafts, and in-progress experiments without treating them like a “final” public release.
WIPs let you share more of your process while keeping your polished work front-and-center in discovery.
A WIP is a post you intentionally label as Work in Progress during upload. It’s meant for:
- Early drafts and rough iterations
- Concept explorations
- “Still cooking” renders
- Progress updates you want followers to see
WIPs are not designed to compete with finished work in public browsing. They’re meant to live closer to your profile and your followers—where process and context matter.
Where WIPs Show Up
WIP posts are visible in the places that make the most sense for ongoing work:
- On your profile: WIPs appear in your posts grid, alongside your other uploads.
- In follower feeds: If someone follows you, they’ll still see your WIPs in their feed—because they’re opting into your work and your process.
WIPs do not appear on the Home/Discover page, so discovery stays focused on finished, showcase-ready posts.
Clear Labeling on Your Profile
When someone views your profile grid, WIP posts are clearly marked with a Work in Progress label on the post card. That way, viewers understand immediately what they’re looking at—no confusion, no guessing, no awkward “wait is this unfinished?” moment.
How to Post a WIP
When uploading a post, you’ll see a Work in Progress toggle in a new Labels section. Turn it on to mark your post as a WIP before publishing.
Designed to Stay Intentional
Once a post is published as a WIP, the label is treated as part of what that post is. The goal is to keep WIPs consistent and intentional—not something that accidentally flips back and forth later.
Why This Matters
A lot of artists want to share more often, show process, and bring followers along for the ride—but don’t want unfinished work pushed into discovery next to polished pieces.
WIPs give you the best of both worlds:
- More freedom to share process
- More clarity for viewers
- A cleaner discovery experience for everyone