1,244 Best Squarespace Website Examples - Page 19
This lawn service site leads with "TAKE YOUR WEEKEND BACK" in white uppercase serif type against a grass-green banner, positioning yard work as time reclaimed.
CrossFit Gahanna
This CrossFit gym site uses extreme letter-spacing on "G A H A N N A" and stacks the value prop as "CROSSFIT, NUTRITION, STRENGTH, MOBILITY, RECOVERY, FAMILY."
This cosmetic tattoo studio site uses a dark olive-and-gold palette with decorative serif fonts and archway-framed imagery to signal luxury beauty expertise.
This mix engineer portfolio uses a cinematic warm-toned hero image with "I WANT TO HELP YOU MAKE MORE MUSIC" in bold serif caps.
This branding agency site uses an industry ticker marquee and a red-X checklist of "outdated website" pain points to position rebrand as urgency-driven fix.
Devin Malloy
This musician's portfolio uses a split hero—portrait flush-left on charcoal, biography in serif italics on white—to separate performer from practice.
This water access nonprofit site announces "IT'S HERE!" in the hero and tilts project images 2–5 degrees for a casual, scattered-photo aesthetic.
This DJ portfolio contrasts psychedelic purple swirl patterns in the hero with blackletter typography and a desaturated cutout photo of the artist.
This electronic music producer site anchors the value proposition in a Spotify stat: "among the top 3% of artists on Spotify."
Dog Biz School
This pet business consulting site uses a two-column hero with a mountain landscape photo and "Who We Work With" section broken into four icon-labeled columns.
This mixing engineer's portfolio scatters navigation across white space with handwritten annotations like "(get a quote!)" and a cave photograph as the visual anchor.
This photojournalist portfolio uses full-bleed black-and-white photography with left-aligned serif text and golden accent links to establish editorial credibility.
This DJ artist site leads with a concert photograph, then anchors attention with a red-orange booking bar stating "Bookings & Management" and contact email.
This tattoo artist portfolio opens with a hero photo of hands mid-work and headlines the artist as "Premium Professional People Painter since 2014."
This nonprofit campaign site positions fashion activism with "DRESS UP. DO GOOD." and uses mustard-gold accents paired with organic blob shapes throughout.
This music producer site uses a full-viewport hero with Drew Mantia's portrait holding synthesis gear and a teal-to-dark gradient, topped by a transparent all-caps navigation bar.
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 real estate investment site leads with "solutions-oriented" positioning and uses interior photography to show finished homes rather than property listings.
This church site opens with an italicized value statement—"You are beloved, you belong, and you are welcome"—then immediately offers dual attendance paths with separate CTAs for online and in-person worship.
This graphic design portfolio site uses a 2-column grid with halftone patterns, hand-lettered service labels, and color-blocked project tiles.
This tattoo studio site pairs a desaturated hero photo of tattooed arms with the tagline "We create long lasting tattoos and fix your bad decisions."
This ceramics portfolio site pairs a warm blush background with red typography and displays sculptural objects in a clean 3-column grid with no image captions.
This hot sauce e-commerce site uses a sticky orange banner announcing "Free Shipping on all Orders Over $40" above a dark navy storefront with serif branding.
Emily Dykeman
This performing arts portfolio highlights "page & stage" with inline colored boxes and scattered star decorations around a circular portrait.
This streamer and voice actor site uses pixel-art vaporwave branding with "HEY! I'M NEGAORYX" as the hero statement and social links spanning six platforms.
This copywriting services site opens with "GET WORDS WITH RESULTS" in bold serif, then uses blob-masked portraits and wavy section dividers to soften professional positioning.
This church site leads with "LOVE GOD. LOVE PEOPLE. LOVE LIFE." in all caps, then decorates a small-groups section with hand-drawn black botanical line art on lavender.
This nonprofit site splits its hero into a photograph of children and solid orange field, with "$25 feeds 125 children for a day" as the conversion anchor.
This church site uses a black hero with centered white serif typography and a stark two-tier navigation that splits left/right around a circular cross logo.
This church website leads with a baptism photograph and "Grace Changes Everything" to establish theological positioning before inviting visitors to in-person gatherings or small groups.