Create professional mockup animations and UI prototypes in minutes with iMockup — no specialized skills needed. Control multiple mockups in one timeline and swap screenshots, videos, or UI states at any moment to design dynamic product demos easily.
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Maker
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A few months ago, I was building my first iOS app and wanted a clean, simple way to showcase it. Screenshots and screen recordings were easy, but turning them into smooth mockup animations took forever. Every transition needed tweaking, every video needed re-rendering — it just wasn’t scalable.
I tried existing mockup tools, but they fell short in two areas that mattered most to me:
1. Animating multiple mockups at the same time
2. Showing different screenshots or videos at different moments in one animation
So I started building my own solution, just to speed up my workflow. That small idea slowly grew into iMockup.
With iMockup, you can:
1. Control multiple mockups on a single timeline
2. Swap images, videos, or UI states at precise moments
3. Build clean, polished animations in minutes instead of hours
Now I’m shipping it here to see if it helps others with the same problem.
If you create product demos, mobile apps, or UI showcases, I’d love to hear your feedback — and what features you'd want next. Thanks for checking it out!
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Solving the multi-mockup animation problem with a single timeline is the right approach. It directly tackles the workflow friction you described.
A key question for professional use: Does iMockup support exporting animations as Lottie JSON files or embeddable code snippets? This is crucial for designers and developers who need to integrate animations into actual apps, websites, or interactive prototypes.
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Maker
@olajiggy321 Thanks for the question! Right now iMockup only supports video export. Other formats like Lottie or embeddable code aren’t supported yet — I’ll look into this and see what it would take to implement.
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@nanxun Thanks for the honest answer—knowing video is the current export focus is helpful context for users planning their workflow.
I have a small, practical idea related to managing user expectations around that export pipeline that you could implement on your own as you evaluate new formats.
If you're open to a suggestion, what's the best way to share it? (Email, DM, etc.)
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Maker
@olajiggy321 Thanks! I’m open to suggestions — feel free to share it here or DM me 😊.
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@nanxun Product Hunt doesn't have DMs, actually. You can share your email here briefly, or I can suggest one: I'm at israelolajide223@gmail.com . Feel free to shoot me a quick message there and I'll send over the idea right away. Whichever's easier!
Replies
Solving the multi-mockup animation problem with a single timeline is the right approach. It directly tackles the workflow friction you described.
A key question for professional use: Does iMockup support exporting animations as Lottie JSON files or embeddable code snippets? This is crucial for designers and developers who need to integrate animations into actual apps, websites, or interactive prototypes.
@olajiggy321 Thanks for the question!
Right now iMockup only supports video export. Other formats like Lottie or embeddable code aren’t supported yet — I’ll look into this and see what it would take to implement.
@nanxun
Thanks for the honest answer—knowing video is the current export focus is helpful context for users planning their workflow.
I have a small, practical idea related to managing user expectations around that export pipeline that you could implement on your own as you evaluate new formats.
If you're open to a suggestion, what's the best way to share it? (Email, DM, etc.)
@olajiggy321 Thanks! I’m open to suggestions — feel free to share it here or DM me 😊.
@nanxun
Product Hunt doesn't have DMs, actually. You can share your email here briefly, or I can suggest one: I'm at israelolajide223@gmail.com . Feel free to shoot me a quick message there and I'll send over the idea right away. Whichever's easier!