Wrap block

21 May 2026
Content

Float a featured element (image, video, chart, QR or company info) and let body text wrap around it.

Wrap Block

What is the Wrap block?

The Wrap block places a featured element — an image, video, chart, QR code or company info card — against body text that wraps around it. It's the magazine-style "text flowing around a photo" layout you can't get out of a plain Content block.

Two main choices control the look: featurePosition (left or right) and featureWidth (quarter, third or half of the section). On mobile the float collapses and the feature stacks above the text.

The featuredContent field has a narrower editor (5 inline blocks: image, youtube, chart, company, QR — plus headings and inline formatting). The mainContent field is the full rich-text editor with all 13 inline blocks. Hover over any example for the "How to set this up" button.


Feature left, one-third width

This is the classic magazine layout — a square image on the left, body text running along the right and curving back underneath as soon as the image ends.

Use it when the image is supporting context for the text rather than the main event. The eye starts on the picture for a beat and then settles into reading the prose.

Notice how the text reclaims the full width once it passes the bottom of the feature. You don't have to balance line counts or do anything special — the layout adapts automatically. On small screens the float collapses and the feature stacks above the text.


Feature right, half width

Mirror the layout and crank the feature width up to half, and the page suddenly feels much more like a two-column editorial spread.

Reach for this variation when the image is doing as much storytelling as the words — a product hero shot, a portrait, a key chart — and you want it to share the stage with the prose.

Because both sides occupy a meaningful share of the section, give the body text enough to say. Three to four well-edited paragraphs read better than one short blurb floating beside a large image.