u/AmoebaOk9523

Rate the portfolio template

Rate the portfolio template

Hi everyone,

I'm a UI/UX designer, and I'm also into branding, ads, and related stuff - basically combining a few disciplines into one.

I'm currently working on my own portfolio website and have been doing a lot of research. I've scrolled through hundreds of portfolios - free ones, paid ones - and noticed that most of them are built on Framer and honestly start to look the same after a while.

Then I came across THIS ONE and it caught my attention because it feels different from the usual templates out there. I'd love to get your honest opinions on it.

I know it might seem a bit unusual at first glance, but that's kind of the point, I want my portfolio to stand out rather than blend in with every other designer's site. At the same time, I don't want "different" to come at the cost of professionalism.

So my question to you: Does it look professional in your opinion? Would you take a designer seriously based on a portfolio like this, or does it feel too unconventional?

Hoping for your feedback. Thanks!

u/AmoebaOk9523 — 3 days ago

I would like to hear opinions on working with advertising creatives. I’m currently building a portfolio website and have run into a problem: my work doesn’t look as polished as what I see on Dribbble and Behance.

I have two years of experience working with 6-7 figure businesses in Europe and the US. All my website and advertising work has been approved directly by the founders. However, from a designer’s perspective, I don’t consider it to be of high enough quality.

I’ve always been told that a website should make money and be user-friendly and simple, not just pretty. I’ve followed this principle in all my work.

Has anyone experienced something similar? What should I do, publish what I have, or try to improve work that has already been approved?

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u/AmoebaOk9523 — 19 days ago