Build a pie, donut, bar, line, area, radar, or polar chart from a small spreadsheet. Pick every color, write the title, control the legend and axes, then download a PNG you can drop into any slide, doc, or post.
Most chart tools either want you to paste in a 500-row CSV or ship you to a heavy "dashboard" app you'll never sign in to again. This one is the opposite. Type the handful of numbers you actually want to show, drag the colors until they match your brand, write a real title, and download a PNG you can drop straight into a slide, doc, post, or print layout. No accounts, no upload, no fuss.
The left panel is a live, editable mini-spreadsheet. Each row is a category (a slice for pie/donut, a bar for bar charts, a point on the x-axis for line charts). Each row has its own color swatch so pies and donuts can be styled exactly the way you want. The "+ Add series" button creates additional value columns — perfect for grouped bars, multi-line trends, or stacked-area comparisons — and each series has its own name and color in the header.
Everything happens locally — typing into the spreadsheet, picking colors, generating the chart, exporting the PNG. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is sent to a server, and the page does not save your numbers anywhere outside the current tab. Close the tab and the chart and its data are gone.
Type or paste your categories and values into the built-in spreadsheet, pick pie (or donut), style the colors and labels, and export the image. No spreadsheet software or account required.
Pie, donut, bar, line, area, polar, and radar. Switching types takes one click, so you can try the same data as a bar chart and a line chart and keep whichever tells the story better.
Yes. Every series color, font, title, axis, and legend is editable, so the chart drops into the deck looking like it was made by the design team.
Export the chart as an image and insert it like any picture. The export is high-resolution, so it stays crisp on a projector.
No. The spreadsheet and the chart both live in your browser, so revenue figures and internal numbers never touch a server.