Skip to main content
Back to Text generators

Text

Nature Ipsum Generator

Nature ipsum swaps scrambled Latin for real English words pulled from four environments — forest, ocean, mountain, and desert. Each theme draws on its own 20-word pool ('canopy', 'moss', 'grove' for forest; 'tide', 'kelp', 'lagoon' for ocean), so a mockup for an eco-brand or outdoor retailer reads on-theme instead of like an afterthought. Pick a single theme, or choose 'all' to blend every pool into one roughly 80-word mix. Set the paragraph count from 1 to 10 to match your content blocks. The generator assembles each paragraph from four to six sentences of six to thirteen random words, so line lengths and rag behave like real copy in Figma, Webflow, or a CMS field. Be aware of the scale: 20 words per theme is plenty of tone for a hero section or card grid, but words repeat visibly across a long page. The output is texture, not prose — sentences are word strings without grammar, meant to carry mood while your layout gets judged on its own merits.

Read the complete guide — 4 min read

How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Set the 'Paragraphs' number to match the text blocks in your current layout.
  2. Choose a theme — forest, ocean, mountain, desert, or all — that fits your project's environment.
  3. Click Generate and review the nature-themed placeholder text in the output area.
  4. Copy the output and paste it directly into your design tool, CMS, or document.

Use Cases

  • Populating hero and body text blocks in a surf brand Figma prototype using the ocean theme
  • Filling product description areas in an organic skincare packaging mockup in Adobe InDesign
  • Mocking up a wilderness retreat booking page with mountain-themed vocabulary across five paragraph blocks
  • Adding on-brand placeholder copy to a national park visitor guide before final editorial copy arrives
  • Testing column widths and line-height in a hiking magazine editorial spread inside InDesign

Tips

  • Use a single focused theme (not 'all') when pitching to a client — ocean words in a mountain gear mockup create subtle friction.
  • Generate one extra paragraph beyond what your layout needs, then trim to fit; this avoids awkward mid-sentence cutoffs at block edges.
  • For packaging mockups, generate two paragraphs, then pull individual sentences as product description lines rather than using full blocks.
  • Pair desert-theme ipsum with warm, earthy color palettes in your mockup — the vocabulary reinforces the visual mood during client review.
  • If your design uses both a hero text block and a blog-style body section, generate them separately with different paragraph counts so the blocks look naturally varied.
  • Regenerate a few times and compare — some outputs will have stronger clusters of evocative words that work better as pull quotes or headline stand-ins.

FAQ

how is nature ipsum different from regular lorem ipsum

Lorem ipsum is scrambled Latin that carries no tone. Nature ipsum strings together real English words like 'canopy', 'shoal', and 'mesa', so a design review of an outdoor or eco brand keeps its atmosphere. The sentences are still grammatical nonsense, though — they are texture, not readable copy.

which theme should I pick for a coastal or beach brand mockup

Choose the ocean theme, which draws from a 20-word pool of sea vocabulary including tide, coral, lagoon, brine, and surf. It keeps a coastal prototype tonally consistent, so client feedback stays on the layout instead of on off-topic filler.

why do the same words keep appearing in my output

Each theme is a fixed pool of 20 words sampled with repeats allowed, so a three-paragraph run reuses most of the pool several times — sometimes within one sentence. If the repetition bothers you, switch to 'all', which merges all four pools into roughly 80 words and spreads repeats much thinner.

can I paste the output into Figma or a CMS without formatting problems

Yes. The output is plain text with paragraph breaks and no embedded styling, so it inherits your design file's typography. It pastes cleanly into Figma, Webflow, InDesign, WordPress, or any plain text field.

You might also like

Popular tools from other categories that share themes with this one.

Try these next

More free tools from other corners of the catalog, picked by shared themes.