№ 001 — On voice2026 · open beta

Write the way
you already write.

Styleprint reads a corpus of your own emails, notes and messages, builds a private profile of how you actually sound, then drafts new text in that exact voice. Not a tone preset. Yours.

InputsEmails, DMs, Slack, Notes, Docs. Drag and drop, or paste.
OutputDrafts in your voice for any reply, message or paragraph.
PrivacyEncrypted at rest. Never used to train any model. Yours to delete.
ModesEmail · Messenger · Notes · Internal · DM · Out-of-office.
S · Sarahfreelance consultant

Hi! Quick check-in — does Friday at 10 still work, or should we push? totally fine either way :)

greetingsoftenerssmileyslowercase mid-line
M · Marcusfounder

Got it. Two questions, then I’ll get out of your way: what’s the deadline, and who owns the rollout?

shortlist-of-twodirect close
P · Priyacontent lead

This works. The third paragraph is doing two jobs at once — could we split it, or is that a feature?

plain proserhetorical Qsdry
§ 02 — Live demo

Paste a few of your own. Watch a profile of your voice form. Write something new in it.

A · Corpus43 words
Awaiting analysis
B · Generateneeds profile
Paste some writing on the left and click Analyze first.

[Demo disclaimer: text never leaves browser unless you click generate. Real Styleprint runs the same analysis privately on your account.]

§ 03 — Method

Three small steps, then it disappears into the apps you already use.

01

Bring your own writing.

Paste, drop a folder, or connect Gmail, iMessage, Notes. Anything you wrote counts. The more variety, the more accurate the model of you.

02

Styleprint reads.

It builds a private profile — cadence, vocabulary, openers, em-dashes, the way you say no without saying no. The profile lives only on your account.

03

Write, in your voice.

Pop up the Styleprint key in any text field. Describe the message. Get a draft that sounds like a tired Tuesday afternoon you, not a chatbot.

§ 04 — Inside the profile

What Styleprint actually keeps. Six things, more or less. All of them, only yours.

Avg sentence11.4 wordsmedium-clipped
Most-used opener“hey — quick one”77 instances over 500 emails
Top sign-off“—{first name}”used 64% of the time
Em-dash rate3.2 / 100whigh; you think in asides
Exclamation rate0.4 / 100wlow; restrained tone
Hedge words“maybe”, “small”, “quickly”used to soften, not to dilute
§ 05 — Pricing

Three tiers. Honest limits. Cancel from a single button.

Start

For trying it out and seeing whether the model picks up on your tics.

$0forever
  • +3 generations / mo
  • +2 analyses / mo
  • +Email mode
  • +Profile preview
Start free
Most picked

Practice

For people who write all day and have stopped enjoying it.

$9per month
  • +Unlimited generations
  • +Unlimited analyses
  • +All modes
  • +Refine over time
  • +Priority processing
Go Practice

Studio

For writers who want their style profile as a portable artifact.

$19per month
  • +Everything in Practice
  • +Export profile (JSON)
  • +API access
  • +Priority support
  • +Early access modes
Go Studio
FAQ · what counts as one generation

One generation is one draft of new text in your voice. Editing a draft, asking for a tone variant, or regenerating the same prompt does not count.

FAQ · refunds

No refunds on monthly subscriptions. Cancel before your renewal and your plan stays active until then. Your profile remains exportable.

§ 06 — Privacy

Your style. Your data. Your rules. We made the boring promises load-bearing.

A

Your samples are never used for training.

Not ours. Not anyone’s. When you delete your account, your samples go with it — fully, on disk, within 24 hours.

B

Your profile belongs to you.

Export it any time as a single JSON file. Take it elsewhere, or keep a copy. It is the shape of your voice; it should not be locked in.

C

Encrypted at rest, in transit, end to end.

Even support cannot read your samples without you explicitly attaching them. Most of the time, they don’t need to.

§ 07 — In use

What it has felt like, for the people already using it.

I spend less time staring at a blank reply box. The drafts are mine — casual, a bit deadpan, the way I actually write to clients.
Sarah · freelance consultantPractice plan
I answer customer threads on three platforms. It keeps me consistent across all of them and saves me about an hour a day. My team noticed before I told them.
Marcus · founderStudio plan