Bring a route
Upload a GPX from Garmin, Coros, Wahoo, or any watch — or connect Strava and pick from your last 200 activities.
Upload a GPX file from any run, ride, or hike — or pull straight from Strava. Pick a theme, dial in the colors, and export a print-ready poster of the lines you've drawn on the earth.
Free to preview · $10 for the high-res download · See an example
No design tools. No layers, no exports, no fiddling with type. Drop in a route, pick a theme, and you have a print-ready file ready for the wall.
Upload a GPX from Garmin, Coros, Wahoo, or any watch — or connect Strava and pick from your last 200 activities.
Four backgrounds, infinitely tunable. Color the line by heart rate, elevation, or speed.
Every order includes all three layouts in both PNG and JPG at 300 dpi. Download and send it to your local lab, or order a print through one of our framing partners.
One-click sync with Strava brings in your last 200 activities — names, dates, splits, heart rate, the works. Pick one and it lands on the canvas, ready to style.
Connect StravaChoose the map that suits the activity — topo for the hills, satellite for the terrain, dark for drama, or a clean solid color.
Topographic map background. Contour lines give context to every climb and descent.
A dark map that makes your route pop. The orange line auto-applies for maximum contrast.
Real aerial imagery underneath. See exactly what terrain you covered.
A solid color fill — nothing but the route. Clean, minimal, endlessly customizable.

Every download is print-ready — all three layouts, in PNG and JPG, at 300 dpi for prints up to ~13 in and gallery-sharp at larger sizes for the wall. Send it to your local lab, or order through one of our framing partners — solid wood, archival mat board, the works.
Real posters, real frames, real rooms. Tag #topoart and yours might land here.




A small selection from emails and Instagram tags over the past year.
I made one for every ultra I finished this year. They hang above my desk and they are quietly the most motivating thing in the house.
Took me longer to decide on the frame than to make the poster. The heart-rate gradient is exactly the kind of detail I geek out on.
Gave my dad a framed print of his first Camino. He cried. I think that's a fair test of a product.