Make the 3 stream screens — Starting Soon / Be Right Back / Ending — at 1920×1080 (or 1280×720) for OBS. Pick a background color or gradient, optionally drop in your own image, and add a title, subtitle, and your handle. Static image only (no animation). Nothing is uploaded.

background image (optional)
text (per screen)

1920×1080 is the standard scene size for OBS / Streamlabs (use 1280×720 for lighter scenes). This makes a still image — for an animated waiting screen, add motion in your streaming software. Type your own wording; the defaults are just placeholders.

drag an image onto the screen

Build the three screens every live stream needs — a Starting Soon / waiting screen, a Be Right Back / break screen, and an Ending / "thanks for watching" screen — for YouTube Live, Twitch, and similar, entirely in your browser on a PC or phone. The size presets follow the standard OBS Studio / Streamlabs scene size of 1920×1080, with 1280×720 available for lighter scenes. Switch the Screen selector (Starting / BRB / Ending) and each screen keeps its own title and subtitle, so you can build all three in one sitting and export them together. The background can be a single color or a two-color vertical gradient to match your stream's theme. Load your own illustration, logo, or photo with the Load image button or by dragging it onto the canvas, scale it with the slider, and drag it to position. You can overlay three kinds of text — a large title, a smaller subtitle, and a handle (shown small in the lower-right, shared across all three screens) — and adjust text color, size, and position (center or lower third). Add an accent bar under the title (with its own color) for polish, and turn on the text panel (a translucent band) to keep text legible over a busy image. When you're done, Download this screen saves the current one, and Download 3-set exports all three (Starting / BRB / Ending) as PNGs at once — ready to load as an Image source or scene background in OBS. Note that this makes a still image; for an animated waiting screen, add motion to the exported PNG in your streaming software (filters, a slideshow, or a video layer). The text starts with placeholder wording — replace it with your own. Loading, placing, lettering, and saving all happen inside your browser (canvas); your image and the text you type are never uploaded, stored, or sent to a server.

How to use

  1. Pick the Screen (Starting / Be Right Back / Ending) and type a title, subtitle, and your handle — text is kept per screen.
  2. Choose a background color or gradient, optionally load your own image and scale/move it, then adjust text color, size, position, the accent bar, and the text panel.
  3. Click Download this screen for one, or Download 3-set for all three PNGs (e.g. 1920×1080) to load as an OBS image source. Your image and text are never uploaded.

FAQ

Is the image I load or the text I type sent to a server?

No. Loading, positioning, lettering, and saving all run entirely inside your browser (canvas). Your image and typed text are never uploaded, stored, or sent to a server.

What size should I use?

The presets follow the standard OBS Studio / Streamlabs scene size of 1920×1080, with 1280×720 for lighter streams or recordings. Load the exported PNG as an Image source in OBS and fit it to the screen.

Can I make an animated waiting screen?

This tool makes a still image (PNG). For an animated waiting screen, add motion to the exported image in your streaming software — for example with filters, a slideshow, or by layering it with a video. Decide the background, title, and colors here, then finish the animation in OBS.

Can the Starting, BRB, and Ending screens have different text?

Yes. Switching the Screen selector swaps the title and subtitle to that screen's own text, and your edits are kept per screen. The handle (lower-right) is shared across all three. Download 3-set exports three PNGs, each with its own text.

My text is hard to read on top of the image.

Turn on the text panel to put a translucent band behind the text so the title stays readable over a photo or illustration. Changing the text color to white/black and adjusting the text size and position (center / lower third) also helps.