Editorial hierarchy
Uses bold type and asymmetric balance instead of a standard centered profile stack.
A magazine-inspired profile structure with asymmetric imagery and a more expressive treatment of identity and destination cards.
Alex Morgan
Creator · Designer · Explorer
Uses bold type and asymmetric balance instead of a standard centered profile stack.
Makes the profile image feel integrated into the composition.
Adapts smaller cards to the editorial direction while keeping them usable.
Cutout Editorial is the most expressive Linktery profile structure. It is intended for artists, stylists, photographers, designers, and creators who want the profile itself to feel like part of the portfolio.
The layout still uses responsive HTML content, so profile names and destination titles remain readable and selectable.
Choose a portrait with a clear silhouette and enough resolution for larger displays. A simple background and strong edge separation help the cutout treatment feel intentional.
Preview the full composition because asymmetry changes how empty space and long names behave across devices.
Editorial layouts depend on deliberate hierarchy. Keep the profile name, bio, and destination titles concise so typography remains part of the design instead of becoming visual noise.
For dense resource directories or long descriptions, Compact Circle may provide a more efficient reading experience.
No. The public template focuses on the user's identity and content without that generic label.
Yes. Its spacing, portrait treatment, typography, and cards adapt across viewport sizes.
It is best for concise, visually led creator or portfolio profiles with a strong portrait and a focused set of destinations.