88 Best Squarespace Food & Beverage Website Examples - Page 3
This grocery co-op site uses a hand-painted display serif font and retro collage photography to position budget eating as community ritual.
This burger restaurant site leads with a red banner declaring "TASTE THE DIFFERENCE" above a three-column grid of category images with ingredient-focused descriptions.
This cocktail bar site uses a dark hero with candlelit marble interiors and positions navigation as small-caps overlays above pre-prohibition aesthetic imagery.
This BBQ restaurant site uses "MEAT / SMOKE / TIME" stacked vertically over hero photography, then announces the partnership with "You can now order Topo and BBQ together!!"
This artisanal toffee shop leads with full-bleed moody overhead photography and pairs "HANDMADE DECADENT TOFFEE" in serif caps with an asymmetric product grid.
This spice shop site showcases hand-crafted blends in a carousel of kraft paper bags illustrated with tropical Australian flora and the Daintree Rainforest origin story.
This specialty coffee site replaces a hero headline with large serif category words—"COFFEE TEA PASTRIES"—layered over a vintage espresso machine and ornate gold security gate.
This specialty food supplier site pairs moody overhead product photography with a handwritten-script headline "Only The Good Stuff" and bright green CTAs to signal quality sourcing.
This specialty cold brew site leads with three product bottles filling the hero—no text overlay, just Victorian-labeled "Big. Easy. Coffee." in close-up.
This craft brewery site sells irreverence with "LIFE'S UNCERTAIN. DON'T SIP." paired against action photography and a split-screen hero layout.
This specialty coffee site anchors its hero with an oversized serif "KAFY" above a rotated oval image of beans and spices spilling from glass.
This hybrid café and nail salon site pairs "Elevate Your Style Uncover New Horizons" with hand-drawn line-art illustrations of cats, plants, and people throughout.
This catering site abandons copy for color-blocked food photography on angled teal, orange, and mustard backgrounds.
This catering site announces its California-Scotland fusion with a Golden Gate Bridge hero image and a soft pink wavy divider separating sections.
This craft brewery site uses retro 1950s head-cross-section illustration and blackletter marquee to announce "don't be baffled—SEE WHAT'S ON TAP!"
This ramen restaurant site splits the hero into dine-in and takeout CTAs with a diagonal geometric divider and hand-drawn "The O.G." typography for menu items.
This chicken restaurant site leads with "FRIED & TRUE." in bold italic serif across a saturated red-orange hero, topped by a fixed nav with "ORDER ONLINE" CTA.
This ice cream chain site uses a split-color "Our Locations" section pairing lime green product imagery with light pink text on the opposite side.
This energy drink site uses red lightning bolt graphics and dripping-paint section dividers to signal gaming-culture intensity alongside T-Pain's "good energy" positioning.
This wholesale donut site uses a split hero with warm chocolate brown background and stacked donuts photo, anchoring "THIS IS THE SWEET SPOT." in bold slab-serif with orange highlight on "SWEET SPOT."
Peet's Coffee
This activist petition site uses floating price tags and hand-drawn circles to visualize Peet's non-dairy milk surcharge as unfair taxation.
This fasting supplement site pairs serif typography with a scrolling marquee overlay and organizes trust signals as icon-text pairs in dual rows.
This bakery site uses a cream background, condensed serif headlines, and a horizontally scrolling ticker of menu items to convey neighborhood craft.
This artisanal bakery site uses script headings and product descriptions in italic serif to position cookies as indulgent, handcrafted goods.
This organic tofu brand site announces "NEW LOOK, SAME HANDCRAFTED TOFU" with a split hero pairing bold display text against product packaging transition photography.
This Squarespace food template presents three product bottles centered in the hero image with barely-legible price labels underneath.
This vermouth e-commerce site frames bottles and cocktails against Mondrian-style color blocks—bright primary segments of blue, yellow, and red—with a bordered "SHOP" button as the sole CTA.
This coffee shop site uses a red wave divider and stacked "DAMN FINE" logo to separate its gritty interior photo hero from a black merchandise grid below.