Pinterest and Behance are two main sources of inspiration for designers and marketers worldwide. However, some content on these platforms is unavailable depending on your geolocation: boards are closed, projects do not load, and search results are truncated. Proxies solve this problem in minutes — without VPNs, without technical knowledge, and without loss of speed.
Why Pinterest and Behance Block Content by Region
Geoblocking is not an accident or a technical failure. It is a deliberate policy of the platforms driven by several reasons: licensing restrictions, advertising markets, local legislation, and sanctions lists.
Pinterest restricts access to certain boards and pins if they are related to commercial content that is not licensed for your region. Additionally, Pinterest's search algorithm adapts to the user's geolocation — you literally see different results than a user from the USA or Germany. This is especially critical for marketers who are looking for references for advertising campaigns: some relevant trends simply do not appear in your feed.
Behance — an Adobe platform — behaves similarly. After the restrictions of 2022 for several regions, some functionalities became unavailable: uploading works, viewing portfolios, participating in contests, and interacting with foreign clients. For freelancers and design agencies, this means direct loss of clients and opportunities.
How do platforms determine your geolocation? It's simple — by the IP address of your device. Each IP address is registered in a specific country and city. When you open Pinterest, the server instantly sees your IP, determines the region, and decides which content to show you (or not show). This is why proxies are the most straightforward solution: you replace your IP with an address from the desired country, and the platform considers you a user from that region.
It is important to understand:
VPNs also change your IP, but they have significant drawbacks for professional work: unstable speed, shared IP with thousands of users (which is easily detectable), and inability to finely tune for a specific profile. Proxies are a more flexible and manageable tool.
Who Needs Access: Designers, Marketers, SMM Specialists
Before choosing a proxy, it is important to understand what tasks you are solving. The use cases for Pinterest and Behance vary significantly depending on the profession.
Designers and Art Directors
The main task is finding references and inspiration. Pinterest is the largest visual search engine in the world, and if you see only 30-40% of the content due to geoblocking, you are working with an incomplete picture of trends. Behance for a designer is a portfolio, networking, and client search. Inaccessibility of the platform = loss of professional visibility.
Marketers and Brand Managers
Pinterest is not just a social network; it is a platform with purchasing intent. Pinterest users actively search for products, shopping ideas, and save products to boards. For a marketer, it is important to see how competitors promote their products in Western markets, what formats work in the USA or Europe. Without access to full content, competitor analysis becomes incomplete.
SMM Specialists and Content Managers
If you manage client accounts on Pinterest — that’s a different story. Agencies often manage 10-30 accounts simultaneously. Each account must operate from a unique IP; otherwise, Pinterest will start suspecting automation and will block the profiles. Proxies here solve two problems at once: bypassing geoblocking and safe multi-accounting.
Freelancers on International Platforms
Behance is a showcase for freelancers working with foreign clients. If the platform is unavailable or works with errors from your region, you lose the opportunity to update your portfolio, respond to inquiries, and participate in the professional community. Proxies with IPs from the USA or Europe completely solve this problem.
Which Type of Proxy to Choose for Pinterest and Behance
Not all proxies work equally well with these platforms. Pinterest and Behance are smart systems that can recognize "non-human" IP addresses. Let's break down what options are available and what is suitable for which tasks.
| Proxy Type | Suitable for | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential | Viewing content, searching for references, managing accounts | Real IPs of home users, minimal risk of blocking | More expensive than data center proxies |
| Mobile | Multi-accounting, managing Pinterest accounts through the mobile interface | High trust from platforms, IPs of mobile operators | Higher price, shared IP with other operator users |
| Data Center | Parsing public data from Behance, mass collection of references | High speed, low price | Easier to detect, not suitable for account management |
For most tasks of designers and marketers, the optimal choice is residential proxies. They use IP addresses of real home users from the desired country. Pinterest and Behance see this traffic as a regular user from the USA, Germany, or any other country — no red flags.
If you are managing multiple Pinterest accounts within an SMM agency, consider mobile proxies. They operate through the IPs of mobile operators — this is the most trusted type of traffic for any social networks. Pinterest rarely blocks mobile IPs because behind one mobile address, there can be hundreds of users (NAT by operators).
Proxy Selection Checklist:
- Viewing content, searching for references → residential proxies
- Managing multiple Pinterest accounts for clients → mobile or residential
- Parsing public data from Behance → data center proxies
- Working with Behance as a freelancer → residential proxies
Setting Up Proxy in the Browser: Step-by-Step Guide
The easiest way to access Pinterest and Behance through a proxy is to set it up directly in the browser. This takes 3-5 minutes and requires no technical knowledge. Let's go through two popular options.
Option 1: Chrome Extension (FoxyProxy or Proxy SwitchyOmega)
This is the fastest way for everyday use. The extension allows you to switch between proxies with one click and set rules: for example, use the proxy only for Pinterest while allowing all other traffic to go directly.
- Install the Proxy SwitchyOmega extension from the Chrome Web Store.
- Open the extension settings → click “New Profile” → select the type “Proxy Profile”.
- In the Protocol field, select SOCKS5 (recommended) or HTTP.
- In the Server field, enter the IP address of the proxy you received from the provider.
- In the Port field, enter the port (usually 1080 for SOCKS5 or 8080 for HTTP).
- If the proxy requires authentication — enter the username and password in the corresponding fields.
- Click “Apply changes”, then activate the profile through the extension icon.
- Open Pinterest or Behance — now the sites see your new IP.
You can check if everything works on the website whatismyip.com — it should show the IP and country of your proxy, not your real address.
Option 2: System Settings for Windows / macOS
If you want to route all traffic through the proxy (not just the browser), set it up at the operating system level.
Windows: Open “Settings” → “Network & Internet” → “Proxy” → enable “Use a proxy server” → enter the address and port → click “Save”.
macOS: Open “System Preferences” → “Network” → select the active connection → click “Advanced” → “Proxy” tab → check the box next to the desired protocol → enter the address and port → click “OK”.
Tip:
System proxies apply to all applications, including the browser and Pinterest apps. However, some programs ignore system settings and require separate configuration. A browser extension is a more precise and manageable option.
Working through Anti-Detect Browser: Dolphin Anty and AdsPower
If you work with Pinterest or Behance professionally — managing multiple accounts, handling client profiles, or engaging in content marketing — consider using an anti-detect browser. This tool creates isolated browser profiles with unique digital fingerprints. Each profile looks like a separate user with a unique device, browser, and IP address.
Popular anti-detect browsers for these tasks include: Dolphin Anty, AdsPower, GoLogin, Multilogin, Octo Browser.
Setting Up Proxy in Dolphin Anty
- Open Dolphin Anty → click “Create Profile”.
- In the “Proxy” section, click “Add Proxy”.
- Select the type: SOCKS5 (for residential and mobile proxies) or HTTP/HTTPS.
- Enter the proxy details: host:port:username:password — usually provided by the provider in this format.
- Click “Check Proxy” — Dolphin will show the country and IP. Make sure it’s the desired region (for example, the USA for full access to Pinterest).
- Configure the other profile settings (User Agent, screen resolution, browser language) → click “Create”.
- Launch the profile → open Pinterest or Behance — the platform sees a user from the desired country.
Setting Up Proxy in AdsPower
- In AdsPower, go to the “Profiles” section → click “New Profile”.
- In the “Proxy Settings” block, select the connection type: Socks5 or HTTP.
- Enter the IP, port, username, and password for your proxy.
- Click “Check Network” — AdsPower will show your external IP and country.
- Save the profile and launch the browser → work with Pinterest or Behance as usual.
The advantage of anti-detect browsers over simple extensions: they change not only the IP but also the entire digital fingerprint of the browser — User Agent, fonts, WebGL, Canvas fingerprint. Pinterest and Behance will not be able to determine that several of your accounts are operating from one device.
Multi-Account Management in Pinterest: For Agencies and Marketers
Pinterest is an underrated platform for business. Especially for e-commerce, design studios, wedding agencies, interior brands, and anything related to visual content. Agencies that conduct Pinterest marketing for clients face one common problem: how to manage 10-30 accounts without bans?
Pinterest tracks several parameters to detect multi-accounting:
- IP Address — if multiple accounts log in from one IP, it’s a red flag.
- Digital Fingerprint — identical browser parameters across different accounts raise suspicion.
- Behavioral Patterns — identical activity times, similar actions.
- Cookies and Cache — if not cleared between sessions, the platform links accounts.
The solution: each client account operates in a separate anti-detect browser profile with a unique proxy. For Pinterest, it is best to use residential proxies tied to a specific country or city — this maximally simulates the behavior of a real user.
Example of Organizing SMM Agency Work on Pinterest
| Account | Profile in Dolphin | Proxy | Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| Client: Interior Studio | Profile #1 | Residential, USA | New York, US |
| Client: Wedding Agency | Profile #2 | Residential, Germany | Berlin, DE |
| Client: Clothing Brand | Profile #3 | Mobile, UK | London, UK |
| Agency Working Account | Profile #4 | Residential, Netherlands | Amsterdam, NL |
This scheme allows you to work with any number of accounts without the risk of chain bans. Even if one account comes under scrutiny, the others will be completely safe — they look like different users from different countries.
Practical Tips and Common Mistakes
Over the years of working with proxies for Pinterest and Behance, a list of typical mistakes made by beginners has accumulated. Let's discuss them in detail so you can do everything right from the start.
Mistake 1: Using Free Proxies
Free proxies are a trap. Their IP addresses have long been blacklisted by Pinterest and Behance. You will not only fail to access blocked content — you risk getting your account banned. Additionally, free proxies are unstable, slow, and may intercept your authentication data.
Mistake 2: One Proxy for Multiple Accounts
If you manage multiple Pinterest accounts and all of them operate through one IP — that’s a direct path to a ban. Pinterest sees that multiple profiles are active from one address and considers it a violation of the rules. The rule is simple: one account = one unique IP.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Browser Language
You connected through a proxy with an American IP, but your browser language is Russian, and the timezone is Moscow. Pinterest sees this discrepancy and may show limited content or request additional verification. In the settings of the anti-detect browser, always synchronize the language, timezone, and geolocation with the proxy region.
Mistake 4: Frequent IP Changes for One Account
If you log into one Pinterest account every day from different IP addresses in different countries — that’s suspicious. A real user usually logs in from one or several stable addresses. For each account, choose one proxy and use it consistently.
Mistake 5: Not Checking Proxies Before Use
Before starting work with an account, always check the proxy through services like ip-api.com or whoer.net. Ensure that the IP belongs to the desired country and is not on known blacklists. This will take 30 seconds but save you hours of troubleshooting.
Checklist Before Starting Work with Pinterest/Behance via Proxy:
- ✅ Proxy from a paid provider (not free)
- ✅ Proxy type: residential or mobile
- ✅ Proxy country matches the desired region
- ✅ IP checked via ip-api.com or whoer.net
- ✅ Browser language matches the proxy region
- ✅ Timezone matches the proxy region
- ✅ One account — one proxy (do not mix!)
- ✅ For multi-accounting — anti-detect browser with separate profiles
Which Region to Choose for Pinterest?
For maximum access to content, choose the USA — this is where the majority of Pinterest content is concentrated, the most active boards, and the full functionality of the platform. For Behance, the USA or Western European countries (Germany, Netherlands, United Kingdom) are also suitable — the platform operates without any restrictions there.
If you need to analyze content for a specific market — for example, you are working with a brand targeting a German audience — choose proxies from Germany. This way, you will see the exact content and trends that are relevant to your target audience.
Conclusion
Geoblocking on Pinterest and Behance is a real problem for designers, marketers, and SMM specialists, directly affecting the quality of work and competitiveness. Seeing only half of the trends, losing access to portfolios on Behance, or being unable to manage client accounts is not just an inconvenience; it is a loss of money and opportunities.
The solution is simple and accessible: a properly selected proxy + a few minutes for setup. To view content and work with one account, a browser extension is sufficient. For professional multi-accounting — an anti-detect browser (Dolphin Anty, AdsPower, GoLogin) in conjunction with separate proxies for each profile.
The main rule: do not skimp on proxies. Free or cheap data center proxies are not suitable for account management — use residential proxies that provide real IPs of home users and minimal risk of blocks. For agencies with a large number of accounts, consider mobile proxies — they provide maximum trust from Pinterest and other platforms.
Investing in quality proxies pays off from the very first working day: you gain full access to global content, safe management of client accounts, and a professional tool that works reliably and predictably.