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Learn how to publish real requests, upload design projects, submit proposals, join structured reviews and forks, and manage provider profiles and cooperation records.
How to Publish a Design Request
Publishing a design request is the starting point for collaboration on LynHub. This guide walks you through filling in the title, area, budget, city, home status, pain points, style preferences, and contact info, and explains what happens after submission.
Read more →02How to Upload a Design Project
Uploading a design project is more than posting a few renders. This guide explains how to fill in the project title, space type, design goal, summary, highlights, areas for improvement, and complete the cover upload and authorization confirmation, making your project a reviewable and forkable design asset.
Read more →03How to Submit a Proposal
A proposal is a complete design solution submitted for a design request. This guide explains how to fill in the proposal title, core design strategy, layout approach, circulation and storage, style and materials, budget strategy, risk reminders, and questions to clarify, making your proposal review-ready.
Read more →04How to Submit a Structured Review
A structured review is not just "looks good" or "don't like it". This guide explains how to write evidence-based strengths, issues, and improvement suggestions around dimensions like circulation, storage, daylight, materials, budget, and construction risk, along with a score and fork directions.
Read more →05How to Create a Forked Improvement
A forked improvement creates an improved version based on an existing project. This guide explains how to choose a base version, fill in the improvement goal, specific changes, rationale, advantages, and new risks, and when to use a fork versus a structured review.
Read more →06How to Understand the Version Tree
The version tree records the evolution path of a design proposal from the base version through structured reviews and forked improvements. This guide explains how to read the version tree, compare branches, understand change rationales and risks, and why you shouldn't judge versions by renders alone.
Read more →07Copyright and Privacy Upload Guidelines
Essential rules to know before uploading content: what you can upload, what you shouldn't, authorization issues for client projects, handling private information in images, choosing a license, and how to contact the platform about infringement or privacy concerns.
Read more →08How to Log In to Your Account
After logging into your LynHub account, you can publish design requests, upload design projects, submit proposals, participate in structured reviews, and create forked improvements. This guide explains how to log in, common failure reasons, and security reminders.
Read more →09How to Sign Up for an Account
After signing up for a LynHub account, you can publish design requests, upload design projects, participate in reviews, and create forked improvements. This guide explains how to create an account with Google or an email verification code, common failure reasons, and security reminders.
Read more →10How to View and Manage Your Account Status
The account page brings together sign-in details, submissions, saved items, cooperation records, provider identity, and request status management. This guide explains each area, sign-out, and common questions.
Read more →11How to Star a Design Project
The star feature lets you bookmark design projects you're interested in, making them easy to view and manage on your account page. This guide explains how to star and unstar projects, where to view your starred list, and what starring does.
Read more →12How to fill in the measurement template
Learn how to use the LynHub measurement template to record room dimensions, label walls and openings, fill in utility points and load-bearing wall sources, helping designers understand your spatial conditions more accurately.
Read more →13How to apply for cooperation
On a request detail page, a service provider can submit a cooperation intent outlining the proposed scope and collaboration budget for the requester to consider.
Read more →14How to adopt a suggestion
A requester can adopt a valuable proposal on the request detail page. Adoption records are shown publicly and count toward the provider's public credit.
Read more →15How to confirm a collaboration record
The requester and the provider can mark a collaboration as done, generating a confirmation record that counts toward public credit once both confirm.
Read more →16How to become a service provider
Set up your service provider identity in the account center by choosing a role and accepted task types, and apply for certification. Taste contributors and professional providers each have their own boundaries.
Read more →17How to join aesthetic optimization
As a taste contributor, you can offer style, soft furnishing, color, and aesthetic review suggestions on public projects.
Read more →18How to cooperate safely
LynHub provides request display, cooperation-intent records, and public-credit tools. It does not hold transaction funds, does not guarantee transactions, and does not take part in offline or private payments between parties.
Read more →19High-risk task notice
Items involving construction, safety, electrical, structural, fire, or gas work are high-risk. Online results serve only as design consultation or deepening reference. Before construction, a locally qualified professional must verify on site.
Read more →If these guides don't answer your questions, you can reach us at hello@lynhub.com.