We've made the [journey editor](https://app.usecustory.com) more comfortable to work in day to day. This update is about improvements that may look small individually but make a real difference once a team is inside the product every week: the editor remembers how you like to work, you can control how much information is shown at once, and the table view becomes a much stronger place for review and cleanup.
## What's New
**Saved view preferences.** Custory now remembers the last journey view you were using, so you don't have to reset the workspace every time you come back. If one person prefers the table for review work and another prefers the visual layout, the editor adapts more naturally to how each person works.
**Property visibility controls.** Teams can now simplify or expand what's shown across cards and structured views by controlling which properties stay visible. Useful for reducing noise during workshops, showing only the fields that matter for a review, or expanding detail for more precision-oriented work.
**Stronger table view.** The table view now supports searchable rows, sorting by key fields, filtering alongside the rest of the editor, and better handling for long item lists. This makes it much more useful when the job is auditing and cleaning up the journey rather than presenting its story.
## Why it matters
The best workflow improvements are often the ones that quietly save time every single session. Remembering view preferences, letting teams control visible properties, and giving them a better table workflow all reduce friction in the moments that happen every day — reopening a journey, switching between discussion and audit work, reviewing long item lists. Less energy managing the interface means more energy improving the journey.
v0.1.11
Saved Views, Properties & Table Workflows
Make the journey editor easier to work in with saved view preferences, property visibility controls, and a stronger table workflow for audits and cleanup.