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Random Product Description Generator
A random product description generator fills e-commerce mockups with copy that reads like a store, not a wireframe. Choose one of five categories — electronics, fashion, home, food, or generic — and every description is built from that category's vocabulary: 'breathable fabric' and 'a modern silhouette' for fashion, '4K display' and 'fast charging support' for electronics, 'no artificial preservatives' for food. Structurally, every output follows one fixed four-sentence template: an adjective-led opener, two features, a benefit, and a closing call to action. Only the slotted words change — each category has 5 adjectives, 5 features, and 5 benefits, and the generator avoids repeating the same adjective or feature within a single description. The result looks finished at a glance while staying visibly uniform up close, which is normal placeholder behavior. Use it to seed product grids, test card truncation, and demo category pages. For anything customer-facing, rewrite around real specs — these descriptions name no product and promise nothing specific.
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select a product category from the dropdown that matches the type of store or section you are designing.
- Set the count field to the number of product descriptions you need for your current layout.
- Click generate and review the list of descriptions that appear in the output panel.
- Copy individual descriptions into your design tool, CMS editor, or paste the full list into a database seed file.
- Run the generator again for a second batch if you need additional variety across a larger product grid.
Use Cases
- •Filling a Shopify theme preview with believable electronics product copy before real inventory exists
- •Seeding a WooCommerce staging database with food-category descriptions to test search and filtering
- •Populating Figma product-card components with realistic fashion copy during a client design review
- •Testing text truncation and line-clamp behaviour on product grids using varied description lengths
- •Generating home-goods placeholder copy for a pitch-deck catalogue PDF sent to potential investors
Tips
- →Mix outputs from the electronics and generic categories to populate a tech accessories store with naturally varied copy.
- →Set count to one when testing a single hero product card; the description will be more focused and easier to evaluate in context.
- →Paste descriptions directly into Figma or Sketch auto-layout frames to instantly stress-test how your card handles different text lengths.
- →For database seeders, generate 20 or more at once and store them in a JSON fixture file so your test suite has a stable pool of realistic data.
- →Use the food category specifically for restaurant and grocery mockups, where neutral generic text reads obviously out of place to stakeholders.
- →If a description is slightly off for your context, keep the structure and swap only the category nouns — the adjective and benefit pattern is already solid.
FAQ
can I use generated product descriptions on a live store
Not as-is. They follow the shape of real marketing copy but name no product and cite no specs, so publishing them unedited risks misleading customers. Use them as scaffolding: keep the structure, replace every claim with a real one.
why use category-specific filler text instead of lorem ipsum
Lorem ipsum tells clients the page is unfinished, which derails layout reviews into content questions. A fashion card that says 'breathable fabric' and 'a modern silhouette' keeps attention on typography, spacing, and hierarchy — the decisions actually under review.
why do all the descriptions in a batch sound the same
Every description uses one fixed four-sentence template — the same opener, the same closing line — with only the adjectives, features, and benefit swapped from pools of five per category. That uniformity is fine for testing card layouts, but for a varied-looking grid you'll want to hand-edit openings or mix categories.
how do I match the generated description length to a product card layout
The template produces roughly 300–340 characters, so test your card's truncation against a full description first. If your layout uses a 'read more' pattern, the first sentence works as the teaser and the full output as the expansion. Generate several and pick the tightest fits rather than editing one down.
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