

The sheer number of recipe sources is impressive, but equally so is how users can drill down by certain criteria - newness, popularity, main ingredient, etc. In case users aren’t exactly sure what they should be buying the first place, AnyList also sports a smart recipe system that culls ingredient lists from huge recipe depositories (think Allrecipes, Epicurious, and the like) to blogs (I’ve never heard of Indian Simmer, but it just got bookmarked). It requires a trivial bit of setup (selecting contacts to share lists with) and multiple iOS devices, but once all that’s done one touch is all it takes to cross a product off of everyone’s list simultaneously.


#Anylist logo update#
The real kicker of the AnyList app formula is its ability to share and update multiple shopping lists in near real-time. So what of this app? There’s no shortage of grocery list apps in Apple’s mobile app store, but the AnyList team chose to focus on one particular aspect that other players hadn’t yet nailed. That said, don’t expect much in the way of changes or new markets (AnyLeaf only works in the SF Bay Area) any more, since the AnyList team will be devoting all their time (and rightfully so) to the eponymous app. Hunter doesn’t plan on shuttering Bay Area-oriented grocery deals service for the time being, since it doesn’t require much effort to keep it running in its current form.

CEO and co-founder Jeff Hunter says the company - now called AnyList - still plans to improve the grocery shopping experience, this time with its thoughtful (and free) iOS-only grocery list app.įirst things first: existing AnyLeaf aficionados don’t need to fret just yet. Today, the company formerly known as AnyLeaf will be officially relaunching with a new name and a new spin on its original mission. Our own Leena Rao (and TC alumnus Greg Kumparak) thought rather highly of it, but it’s been over a year since then and the team behind it has had a change of heart. (for example, a link back to their website).In early 2011, Y Combinator-backed AnyLeaf opened its grocery deal aggregation service to to citizens of the San Francisco Bay Area.
#Anylist logo license#
The license to see if the designer is requesting attribution This icon can be used for both Personal &Ĭommercial purposes and projects, but please check Converting it to an ICO, JPEG or WebP image format or file type should also be pretty simple (we hope to add that feature to Iconduck soon).
#Anylist logo download#
If you need this icon available in another format, it should be pretty straight forward to download it as an SVG image file, and then import it into apps like Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Canva or Pixlr. It's part of the icon set " Arcticons Icon Pack", which has 5,605 icons in it. It's available to be downloaded in SVG and PNG formats (available in 256, 512, 10 PNG sizes). This open source icon is named "anylist" and is licensed under the open source GPL v3 license.
