1,244 Best Squarespace Website Examples - Page 18
This dental practice site organizes services in a three-column grid with circular arrow navigation buttons between cards, emphasizing "25+ Years of Experience | Emergency Services Available | Same Day Appointments Available."
This homeowners association site opens with "Welcome home" in script over a dusk-lit craftsman house, then branches into resident resources and board contact via two-column cards.
This church site repeats "Plan a Visit" as its only CTA and anchors the hero with a baptism photograph and "God is up to something new in Las Vegas."
This virtual assistant site uses a 70s-inspired serif display font and illustrated women to position VA work as fun partnership, not corporate outsourcing.
Caroline Willis
This photographer's portfolio site uses a three-column masonry grid with no captions or hover states, letting candid NYC street photography dominate the layout.
This plant-based snack site leads with serif italics declaring "MEET YOUR FAV NEW SNACK" over a sage-green hero, pairing copy about cookie-looks and cracker-crunch with product shots styled alongside cheese blocks.
This voice coach and performer site uses rotated photo collages with hand-drawn arrows and handwritten captions to build personality alongside serif headlines proclaiming "I'm all about the voice."
Celia Peachey
This personal development site splits the layout 55/45 with a geometric sunburst background on left and a white modal captioning "BE YOUR ULTIMATE ALCHEMIST" on right.
This therapy practice site sells relationship expertise through arch-framed couple photography, terracotta circles, and "Modern therapy for fulfilling relationships" in italic serif.
This illustration portfolio displays commercial work in a 4-column masonry grid with no image borders, letting neon-saturated artwork for UFC, MLB, and Marvel dominate white space.
Champions Mortgage
This mortgage lender site opens with "The Home Loan Process Can Be a Nightmare" and uses a family-in-home hero photo to counter that anxiety.
This nonprofit summer enrichment site uses a carousel hero with "EVERY STUDENT DESERVES ACCESS TO AN ENRICHING SUMMER EXPERIENCE" as its singular H1.
This UX designer portfolio uses a chrome-embossed hero headline and floating geometric shapes that introduce colorful product work like the Cope therapy app.
This nonprofit site uses a community photo in the hero with officers and residents together, leading with "Building bridges between community and the police."
This broadcast journalist portfolio leads with a full-width demo reel, then organizes work categories—"Creative Storytelling," "Interviews," "U.S. Coverage"—as a four-column grid of thumbnail clips below.
This church site uses mixed-font collage typography with "JESUS" in cyan brackets centered over a grayscale worship photo.
This church website opens with a dismissible announcement bar and leads with "The best is yet to come," emphasizing the word "best" with an underline.
Claire Pearson Coaching
This life coaching site opens with "You are ONE simple step away from rapidly transforming your life:" and uses a form asking clients to check which life or work changes they're navigating.
This product styling portfolio uses a scrolling marquee overlay and circular grid to showcase colorful editorial photography alongside "Fun and colourful product styling and photography to elevate your brand."
This tattoo shop site combines hand-drawn serif headlines with traditional American flash art photography to signal both craftsmanship and classic aesthetic.
This cleaning services site organizes packages by point-checklist specificity: "Basic Clean" (25+), "Deep Clean" (45+), "Moving Clean" (65+).
This commercial cleaning service site sells professionalism through "We don't cut corners, we clean them—exceptionally well" and a two-column feature list backed by Google reviews.
This residential cleaning service site leads with a full-width illustrated hero of a smiling cleaner in yellow overalls against a cheerful suburban landscape.
This photographer portfolio uses an asymmetric masonry grid to display lifestyle and action sports imagery with sharp corners and generous white space.
This leadership coaching site uses an offset photo-and-card layout where a blue angled rectangle overlaps a laptop image, positioning the "Are you:" questions as a physical intrusion into the scene.
This church site uses a semi-transparent dark overlay on the hero image and stacks testimonial cards in horizontal scroll to highlight member stories.
This nonprofit housing site leads with a hero image of tiny-home villages and uses a two-column "Who is CVC?" section pairing explanatory copy against stacked container-home photography.
This therapy practice site leads with "Even if you or your child look angry on the outside, you know something bigger is happening underneath the surface," then backs claims with "91% of our clients see improvements."
This tattoo studio site uses copper metallic small-caps typography and portrait grid to position artists as the primary content over the studio itself.
This photography portfolio site anchors navigation as category links stacked in the bottom-left corner, letting a full-bleed landscape image dominate.