Flowershow
Flowershow is a publishing platform that turns Markdown files into fully hosted websites with almost no setup required. Whether you're building documentation, a blog, a personal wiki, or a knowledge base, the goal is to remove the traditional friction between writing content and putting it online.
Instead of asking users to learn deployment workflows, configure hosting, or maintain infrastructure, Flowershow focuses on the content itself. If your information already exists in Markdown, you can publish it directly and get a polished website without touching code or server configuration.
Built around open content, not proprietary formats
A common frustration with many website builders and note-publishing platforms is that content often becomes trapped inside proprietary editors and closed ecosystems. Flowershow takes a noticeably different approach.
The platform treats Markdown as the source of truth and supports importing content from places people already use, including GitHub repositories, Obsidian vaults, local files, and CLI workflows. Your content remains portable and readable outside the platform, which makes adoption feel less risky for long-term projects.
This philosophy will likely appeal to writers, developers, and knowledge workers who want the convenience of managed hosting without sacrificing ownership of their content.
From notes to public knowledge
One of the most interesting aspects of Flowershow is how it blurs the line between personal notes and public publishing. Many people already maintain large collections of Markdown files but never publish them because the process feels unnecessarily technical.
Flowershow turns that existing content into websites with minimal effort, making it easier to share documentation, research, tutorials, team knowledge, or personal writing with a wider audience.
The result is a platform that feels less like a traditional website builder and more like a publishing layer for the Markdown ecosystem.