43 Best Squarespace Misc Website Examples
I found the best Squarespace misc websites to share for inspiration. Only 0.1% of reviewed website designs make it onto this list! Each website example includes a tall screenshot, a link to the live site, and the platform it was built on.
This acupuncture site uses coral serif headings in all caps and "Book free consult" as a text-link alternative to the primary appointment button.
This senior arts education site mixes serif headings with cursive accents and arranges program photos as overlapping polaroids with handwritten-style labels.
This lactation consulting site frames the founder's name in handwriting-style serif and clips her portrait into a teal-outlined circle.
This textile artist portfolio uses a desaturated olive background, red-orange display serif headlines, and a masonry grid against dark teal to showcase handmade garments and wearable art.
FYRI
This candle e-commerce site pairs moody flat-lay product photography with italic serif headlines and refillable collection navigation to emphasize sustainability.
This mobile wallpaper shop sells art exclusively through iPhone mockups showing products at overlapping angles with real-time clock displays.
This luxury candle brand uses a 2-column grid of full-bleed product photography with zero gutters and "Sold Out" badges to signal scarcity.
This design studio site leads with "MADE TO ORDER, MADE TO LOVE" over a hand holding a terrazzo light fixture against warm beige.
This woodworking tutorial site organizes 20+ projects in a 4-column grid with workshop photos overlaid by bold uppercase titles on solid-color banners.
This woodworking studio site layers serif typography over workshop photography and uses dark brown rectangular text blocks to anchor "Quality Craftsmanship, Handmade in Canada."
This designer portfolio uses a masonry grid of duotone-filtered images framed by bright primary-color border strips on the viewport edges.
This plant and planter e-commerce site uses serif italic headings paired with a dark forest green palette and names each product after a person ("Tris," "Nora," "Noah").
This custom furniture site uses a decorative serif typeface for "CUSTOM FURNITURE AND SMALL GOODS" overlaid on a workshop hero image.
This digital artist portfolio uses a three-column fantasy art carousel with cyan-to-magenta gradient logo and neon social icons on black.
Dungeons & Documentation
This podcast site applies information architecture concepts to D&D with diagonal teal stripes, comic-book typography, and cards titled "User Journeys: WHAT PLAYERS WANT."
This fine art publisher leads with an oil painting of a California bridge, then positions the artist's work as escape: "Art that takes you to a place you'd rather be."
This stationery shop highlights product categories with "Shop [item] →" text links paired directly above rounded-corner images, each showing products in use or styled environments.
This graphic designer's portfolio displays craft beer labels in a 4-column grid with lifestyle photography, mixing flat design mockups and product shots.
This boutique gift site embeds a recursive screenshot—a woman holding a tablet displaying the website itself—as the hero image.
This personalized gift store uses a 2×2 grid of lifestyle photography where each tile shows framed art in home settings, with category labels overlaid top-left.
This Danish plant brand site sells handmade terrariums using overlapping product photography cards and "Plantegrøn som passer sig selv" as the pitch.
This antique telephone e-commerce site uses overlaid product names and prices directly on moody photography, with the tagline "long-lived **antiques** with **modern** function."
This greeting card shop uses hot pink banners, tilted product cards, and illustrated humor—"YOU'RE HOT," "ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU!"—to sell quirky stationery with hand-write-and-send service.
This Asian arts boutique site layers full-width product photography with centered white serif headlines and German product descriptions as overlay text.
This artisan soap shop displays every product on bamboo soap dishes against distressed wood, with a red banner screaming "GET THEM BEFORE THEY BECOME ONE FOR THE HISTORY BOOKS!!"
This novelty goods shop uses a bright red hero with individually tilted serif words ("FUNNY" / "PUNNY" / "CRITTERS" / "HONEY") creating a playful sticker-collage effect.
This artisan homeware shop presents products in an asymmetric masonry grid with small-caps serif labels, pairing "The artisan's touch crafts poetry into every day's life" with handmade metalwork, wood, and woven goods.
This custom furniture portfolio showcases live-edge wood pieces with large product photography, minimal navigation, and "BY NIK AZMANOV" attributed below each collection heading.
Family Table Books
This family keepsake publisher uses a fixed navy navigation bar with gold HOME link and a hero of overhead table photography, anchoring nostalgia through styled flatlay imagery.
This plant e-commerce site uses a red banner asking users to "Select your city to view products available to your location" before revealing inventory.
About this collection
This is a collection of websites organized by the platform they are built on, category, and sometimes tags and the creator. They're here for inspiration. Most websites made it into this collection because they have beautiful designs, while others showcase exceptional copywriting or information architecture.
What this page contains
This page showcases 43 website examples built with Squarespace in the Misc category. Each website includes a tall screenshot, a link to the live site, the platform it was built on, and a description (generated with AI).
Quality may vary by category or platform
Some sites aren't an absolute 10/10, but they shine relative to their categorization. For example, categories like Notary or HOA don't reach the same design heights as Designer or SaaS sites. They're still included so people in those industries have relevant references when building their website.
How these websites are picked
While I won't reveal the exact details of my curation process (so competitors can't copy), I can share that:
- They are all organically sourced (i.e., I don't copy other inspiration galleries)
- It's an arduous process to find these gems. I typically review 10,000 sites to discover just 10 worthy additions.
The purpose of this collection
There are two primary reasons people view these website examples:
- To find design, copy, or general website inspiration from similar businesses in their industry
- To explore the capabilities of website platforms before making a decision
Oh yes, and affiliate marketing. I'm part of affiliate programs for some of the platforms, so if you purchase after clicking a link, I may earn a commission.
Want to suggest a site?
Reach out to me on LinkedIn.