How do you combine Tumblr blogs?
Here’s one way:
- Login to the Tumblr account you wish to transfer a blog from.
- From the top menu of the Dashboard select the blog you want to transfer.
- In that list of controls you’ll see a button for Members.
- Add the login email for the Tumblr account you want to transfer the blog to and then click Invite to this blog.
Can you move Tumblr posts to another blog?
Log into the OLD tumblr account. Go back to the Members page for the blog you want to move and change the NEW account to be an admin. Log into the NEW tumblr account and confirm you can post, change settings, etc. You’ve now transferred the blog to your NEW tumblr account.
Is Pillowfort like Tumblr?
Pillowfort wasn’t designed to be Tumblr. It was an alternative, based on years spent in fandom communities on sites like LiveJournal and Dreamwidth, a similar journaling and blogging tool.
What is Masterlist?
A masterlist (or master list) is a collected list of everything that falls into a particular category. The category can be broad or narrow, such as: “everything in the fandom”, such as the Invisible Man Master List.
How do you link your Masterlist on Tumblr?
i’ll try and do it step by step, i hope this helps!
- login to tumblr on desktop or on safari/google on mobile (this won’t work on the app).
- click the top left corner icon that looks like 3 lines.
- click settings.
- click account.
- it’ll bring you up to a page with a list of your blogs to the right hand side.
How do you reblog on your secondary blog on Tumblr?
- Navigate to Tumblr.com and log in to your account.
- Click the link for the blog on which you want the reblog to appear at the top of your Dashboard.
- Locate the post from your first blog that you want to reblog, either in your Dashboard or directly on the post page on your blog.
Can secondary Tumblr blogs have followers?
Why might that matter? Secondary blogs cannot like posts, follow other blogs, send ask messages or submit to other blogs. Only primary blogs can make those social gestures. Maybe that’s okay for you, especially if you need the multiple authors and password protection that a secondary blog offers.