Paste a short lyric excerpt
Use two to six lines from a hook, chorus, bridge, or demo note. Short lines look better on social cards than a full verse, and they are easier to read on mobile screens.
Paste a chorus, hook, or favorite lyric line and turn it into a clean shareable card. Choose a square, story, or landscape layout, adjust the theme, then download a lightweight SVG file for posts, mood boards, demos, or songwriting notes.
Your text stays in this browser preview. Use only lyrics you own, wrote, or have permission to share.
The download is an editable SVG. Open it in a browser, design app, or image editor if you need a PNG export.
Use two to six lines from a hook, chorus, bridge, or demo note. Short lines look better on social cards than a full verse, and they are easier to read on mobile screens.
Give the card enough context so viewers know what they are reading. Choose a warm, dark, paper, or neon theme, then pick the card size that fits your post or planning board.
The generated file is SVG, so it stays crisp when resized. Use it for a song announcement draft, lyric mood board, writing deck, playlist note, or private collaboration preview.
Pick the output format based on where the lyric card will live. The words should stay readable before the style gets decorative.
| Use case | Suggested size | Practical tip |
|---|---|---|
| Instagram-style post or square cover idea | Square post | Use 3-4 short lines and a clear song title so the card still reads in a feed. |
| Story, reel intro, or vertical lyric teaser | Vertical story | Use fewer lines and leave breathing room; tall layouts can look crowded quickly. |
| YouTube community post, desktop preview, or slide | Landscape | Works well for a hook plus title because the width gives the lyric line more room. |
| Songwriting mood board or client draft | Square or landscape | Keep the card editable as SVG so you can revise wording after feedback. |
A lyric card is not just decoration. It should make one memorable line easy to read, save, and discuss.
Most lyric cards fail because they try to show too many words. Choose the hook, emotional turn, or one clean image instead of pasting a full verse. If the line needs context, add one more supporting line and stop there.
This tool is a neutral lyrics card maker. It is not affiliated with Spotify, Genius, Apple Music, or any streaming platform. Use your own song title and project name rather than copying official UI, logos, or platform artwork.
Lyric excerpts can be protected by copyright. The safest use is your own writing, a collaborator-approved draft, public-domain text, or lines you have permission to share. For commercial release art, check platform and label requirements first.
Many people will see the card on a phone. Use strong contrast, short line breaks, and one visual mood. If the lyric is hard to read at thumbnail size, simplify the excerpt or switch to a cleaner theme.
A card can help test a hook before finishing the song. Generate a title with the Song Title Generator, draft lyrics with the AI Lyrics Generator, improve wording with the AI Lyric Rewriter, then turn the strongest line into a shareable card.
Write the full lyric draft before selecting the strongest line for a card.
Open ToolCreate a title that gives your lyric card context and makes it easier to remember.
Open ToolPolish a hook or chorus before turning it into a card for sharing.
Open ToolA lyrics card generator turns short lyric lines, a song title, and an artist name into a shareable visual card. It is useful for hooks, chorus previews, songwriting boards, and demo announcements.
The page can help people searching for a Spotify-style lyrics card, but it is not affiliated with Spotify and does not copy official Spotify UI. It creates neutral lyric cards from text you provide.
Yes. The tool downloads an SVG file, which is a crisp editable image format. You can open the SVG in a browser or design app and export PNG or JPG if needed.
Use caution. Lyrics may be copyrighted even when the excerpt is short. For safest results, use your own lyrics, public-domain text, or lines you have permission to share.
Use square for feed posts, vertical story for phone-first previews, and landscape for slides, desktop previews, or wider announcement graphics.
No account is required and the preview runs in your browser. Avoid entering private or unreleased material on any web tool unless you are comfortable testing it there.
Use fewer lines, keep line breaks intentional, choose a high-contrast theme, and make sure the title and artist text explain the context without overpowering the lyric.