There’s a new trendy way to analyze your Spotify data and this time it’s not a pie or an iceberg, but an old school collage.
Spotify Rainbow Collage either displays the album covers of your top songs or the artist photos of your top artists depending on how you tailor it. In short, it’s a way for social media fanatics to share a snapshot of their music taste.
How to stop Spotify from sharing your data, and why you should
What is Spotify Rainbow Collage?
Spotify Rainbow Collage analyzes your Spotify listening and allows you to customize a collage of your top songs or artists. You can choose the timespan you want the collage to represent and how many album covers to show on each axis — the largest collage option is nine by nine. It also allows you to pick how you want your top songs or artists organized. For those concerned with raw numbers you can sort it by play count, but the aesthetically moved can sort it by color or brightness.
These collages are the latest way to show off your music taste on social media with users flocking to Twitter to share their collages … and judge other people’s.
How to make a Spotify Rainbow Collage
To use Spotify Rainbow Collage you have to share your Spotify data with the site, if that’s not something you’re comfortable with sit this one out.
If you’re comfortable sharing your data, here’s how to make a Spotify Rainbow Collage:
- 3 minutes
- Spotify account
Step 1:
Go to chartmymusic.com/spotify/rainbowcollage
Step 2:
Login with your Spotify account
Step 3:
Grant the site permission to access your Spotify data
Step 4:
Customize the dimensions and organization of your collage
Step 5:
Hit the “Generate” button
It might take a couple of tries to access the website, but if you keep refreshing you’ll get in eventually.
Who created Spotify Rainbow Collage?
According to the site, Spotify Rainbow Collage was created by a 20-year-old computer science student at the University of Leuven in Belgium.
Source : Spotify Rainbow Collage Generator turns your top songs and artists into shareable art