Pick a direction, not a template
Design directions, prepared for
Your Brand
Pick a direction, not a template
Every style below is a live, working demo. Type your business name, watch it land in every one, and heart the ones that feel like you.
No signup to browse. Heart your favorites and we will turn them into your style board.
Every style above is a live demo we built from scratch, not a screenshot and not a template. Updated for 2026, this is what each style is, where it came from, and the kind of business it works hardest for. When one feels right, scroll back up, type your name into it, and heart it.
The discipline of less: generous whitespace, restrained type, one accent, and photography that gets room to breathe. Minimalist web design signals confidence and taste, which is why fashion labels, photographers, architects, and portfolios lean on it.
Born from 1950s Swiss typography: a visible grid, hairline rules, zero border radius, and grotesque type set with intent. Swiss style web design reads as precise and dependable, a natural fit for IT, finance, and professional services.
No gradients, no shadows, no tricks. Flat design carries meaning through color and shape alone, which keeps pages fast and interfaces obvious. Corporate sites, SaaS products, and news portals use it because nothing gets between the user and the task.
Named after the lunchbox: content organized into tidy, rounded tiles of different sizes, each doing one job. Bento grids shine when a business has many things to show at once, dashboards, feature sets, portfolios, and app landing pages.
Soft UI carved out of the page surface with paired light and dark shadows, so every control looks pressable. Neumorphism feels calm and tactile, which suits apps, smart products, and fintech tools that want to feel effortless.
Design with a conscience: lightweight pages, honest keylines, flat color, and accessibility built in rather than bolted on. Sustainable web design cuts carbon per page view, and for nonprofits and B-corps the medium is the message.
The modern product-first storefront: editorial serif type, flat studio color mats, hairline borders, and photography doing the selling. If you run a DTC brand, boutique, or small-batch product line, this is the style your customers already trust.
Thick black borders, hard offset shadows, loud flat color, and type with a temper. Neubrutalist web design breaks the polished template look on purpose, which makes startups, creators, and edgy product brands feel impossible to ignore.
Diagonals, bold geometry, and revolutionary red, borrowed from 1920s Soviet poster art. Constructivist layouts feel urgent and energetic, a strong choice for agencies, events, and campaigns that need momentum on the page.
The magazine, translated to the browser: serif headlines, pull quotes, drop caps, and a reading rhythm that respects long-form. Editorial style fits publications, consultancies, and any brand whose product is its thinking.
Real depth instead of decoration: perspective scenes, objects floating at different distances, and a page that tilts as you move. 3D web design is the flex for tech products, AI startups, and labs that want the site itself to be the proof.
Rules broken on purpose: colliding blocks, outlined and mirrored type, and layouts that refuse to sit still. Anti-design reads as fearless and fashion-adjacent, which is why studios, type foundries, and portfolios wear it well.
More is more: clashing type, stickers, marquees, and dense composition tuned like a market stall at noon. Maximalist web design is unbeatable for merch, music, and food brands whose whole personality is enthusiasm.
No pictures, no decoration, just typography at billboard scale carrying every ounce of the message. Big type design signals total confidence, which makes it a favorite of consultancies, agencies, and founders with one sharp sentence.
Wobbly underlines, taped photos, and handwriting where a logo would normally go. Hand-drawn design feels human before a single word is read, perfect for cafes, makers, kids brands, and anyone selling warmth.
Mid-century optimism: cream and orange, chunky rounded type, TV dials and jukebox energy. Retro web design trades on familiarity and charm, and diners, barbershops, and heritage brands cash that in daily.
The early web, remembered fondly: faux OS windows, pixel type, hit counters, and chrome. Y2K design winks at an era, which makes it a magnet for streetwear, music, and gen-z facing brands.
The future as promised in 1984: neon glow, chrome text, a striped sun setting over an endless grid. Retrofuturism gives gaming, nightlife, and event brands a world to live in, not just a website.
Cut, torn, taped, and composed by hand: ransom-note type, paper strips, polaroids, and postage stamps. Collage design feels curated and artistic, tailor-made for ensembles, theatres, artists, and boutique brands.
Two fluorescent inks, one drum, and a little misregistration charm, the risograph look brought to the browser. Riso web design feels small-batch and sincere, which is exactly the shelf cafes, breweries, and indie shops want to sit on.
It depends on what you sell and who you sell to. Service businesses usually win with clean, trust-first styles like Minimalism, Swiss, or Editorial. Product brands convert best with Studio Commerce. Brands built on personality do well with Neobrutalism, Maximalism, or Hand-Drawn. The fastest way to decide is to see your own business name inside each one, which is what this page is for.
Neobrutalism is a bold style built from thick black borders, hard offset shadows, loud flat colors, and heavy display type. It deliberately breaks the polished template look, which makes brands feel confident and impossible to ignore. It works best for startups, creators, and edgy product brands.
Neumorphism carves soft, opaque controls out of the page surface using paired light and dark shadows, so buttons look pressable. Glassmorphism uses translucent, frosted panels floating over a colorful background. Neumorphism feels tactile and calm, which suits apps, dashboards, and smart products.
Yes, and the best custom sites usually do. A common recipe is one structural style, like Swiss or Editorial, plus one personality style, like Riso Print or Hand-Drawn, applied to accents and imagery. The key is deciding the mix on purpose instead of letting it happen by accident.
Start from your customer, not your taste: what should they feel in the first three seconds? Shortlist two or three styles that create that feeling, then look at them with your own name inside, not someone else's brand. Heart your favorites above and we will email you a free style board to compare them side by side.
Heart the styles that feel like you and we will email you a free style board with your business name set inside each one.
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The next step
Every site we build starts with a direction you love, then becomes a custom build around your business. No templates, no page builders.
Reply to your style board email or write to contact@minick.studio
We will email you a personal style board: your picks, your name in each direction, and a live link that opens them with your name inside.
Your style board is on its way. Reply to that email any time, a real person reads every one.