Freelance Web Developers in Ashburn
Freelance Web Developers in Ashburn
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Farida Amin
pro
Ashburn, USA
UI/UX Web Designer & Web Developer | Graphic Designer
$5k+
Earned
8x
Hired
5.0
Rating
70
Followers
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UI/UX Web Designer & Web Developer | Graphic Designer
5
WordPress Web Design & Development
5
88
$1.5K+ earned
5
Framer Web Design & Development
5
41
3
Modern Logo & Brand Identity Design
3
13
3
Landing Page Design | Figma UI/UX | Mobile Responsive
3
29
Web Developer
(1)
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Muhammad Shoaib
Manassas, USA
Web and SEO Expert | Your Growth Partner
5.0
Rating
36
Followers
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Web and SEO Expert | Your Growth Partner
8
Edon Sacco Society | WordPress Website Development
8
23
9
Branding, Website Development & GMB Profile for Taxi Company
9
36
9
$1 Million+ in 9 Months for a Client | Development & Growth
9
35
9
+433% Increase in Business for Forex Trading Institute
9
42
Web Developer
(2)
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Conor M
Washington, USA
Design partner for early-stage startups π
$5k+
Earned
2x
Hired
5.0
Rating
103
Followers
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Design partner for early-stage startups π
1
Website Design and Webflow Development for Review Harvest
1
12
3
Responsive Webflow Animation Project
3
13
2
Designing a Brand and Multi-Page Website for a Consultancy
2
11
5
Kickstarter needed landing pages for their new Partner Programβmaking it easy for creators to understand the program, compare partners, and take action. What we delivered: Partner Program landing page with clear hero, featured partners, and "Become a Partner" CTA Partner Directory with scannable cards, filters by service type/region/specialty Modular Figma system they can ship now and extend later Our process: Low-fi wireframes β high-fidelity with branding β final polish with developer annotations. No guesswork. In 3 weeks: wireframes (desktop, tablet, mobile), high-fidelity designs, reusable component library, and a development-ready file. "Conor was a great partnerβvery well organized, hit fast deadlines, guided us with the right questions and delivered solid work. Would definitely work with him again."
5
143
Web Developer
(3)
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Ibrahim Babalola
Ashburn, USA
Your go-to webflow guy
10
Followers
Expert
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Your go-to webflow guy
1
DriveGlobal Webflow Landing Page Development
1
2
1
Webflow Website Development - GridRival
1
1
1
PromptGPT Landing Page Redesign
1
6
1
Kokotide Studio Portfolio Website
1
4
Web Developer
(2)
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Brian Pyatt
pro
Ashburn, USA
Senior AI Solutions Architect | Agentic Systems & Product
New to Contra
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Senior AI Solutions Architect | Agentic Systems & Product
0
Velocity Electric : AI Voice Agent + CRM Integration
0
5
0
Textpro.ai β AI Universal Concierge Platform
0
3
0
GitHub - spotcircuit/rebar: Rebar β structural memory frameworkβ¦
0
4
0
A lot of people building with Claude Code-style agents are still focused on prompt engineering. I get why. Itβs the most visible lever. But I think the bigger opportunity is usually somewhere else: the reusable skills, workflows, or slash commands an agent relies on over and over again. Those are what shape behavior over time. And in my experience, improving them is less about piling on new instructions and more about tightening the loop around failure. Watch where the agent breaks. Figure out why. Fix the workflow. Repeat. Sometimes that means adding a rule. Just as often, it means removing one. Over the last couple of days, I rebuilt the /close-loop cycle in my framework, Rebar, and it clarified something Iβve been feeling for a while: A lot of agent systems have evaluation. Fewer have a feedback loop that actually makes them simpler, cheaper, and more reliable over time. That difference matters. In the old version of my loop, a feature could be marked complete because the evaluator returned a PASS. The orchestrator would close the issue, everything looked fine, and only later would I realize something important was still missing β like a Prisma migration file. So the feature wasnβt really done. It just had the appearance of being done. The evaluator had often already pointed at the problem in its follow-up notes. But the system wasnβt treating that kind of language as blocking. βPASS with follow-upsβ was getting interpreted too generously. That was the real failure: not bad evaluation, but a weak handoff between evaluation and release. So I rebuilt the loop around four gates, and all four have to pass before βdoneβ means anything: 1 . Evaluator Checks code, scope, and completeness and writes structured findings. 2. Release gate Scans those findings for blocking language like βmust generate,β βcannot ship,β or βbefore any live DB.β If that language shows up, the work is blocked. 3. Cycle-scoped improve step Promotes only the current cycleβs validated observations into the expertise file, instead of dragging in stale backlog noise. 4. Meta-improve Looks across evaluator logs for repeated failure patterns and proposes changes to the templates themselves, with a human review step before anything sensitive gets updated. That last piece is where the compounding effect starts to show up. Because the default instinct in agent systems is usually to add. Add another reminder. Add another caveat. Add another paragraph to the template so the model doesnβt make that mistake again. Sometimes thatβs right. But itβs also how workflows slowly turn into bloated instruction stacks that cost more and work worse. Every extra line gets paid for on every future run. And long prompts full of overlapping rules are often harder for models to follow consistently than a smaller number of clear ones. So the better question is not βwhat else should we add?β Itβs βwhat actually belongs in the workflow?β In the first real cycle of the rebuilt loop, I saw four patterns: - schema changes without Prisma migrations - dirty working tree bleeding across features - orphan Vue refs that were declared but never rendered - Hono context typing debt across multiple routes Only the first two justified workflow changes. The orphan refs were already being caught by the evaluator, so there was no reason to duplicate that logic in the template. The Hono typing issue was real, but it was cleanup work, not a process problem. That distinction matters more than it sounds. If every bug becomes a workflow rule, the system gets heavier every week. If youβre disciplined about separating repeatable process failures from one-off implementation issues, the workflow stays lean. And thatβs really the bigger point here. There are two things improving at the same time: First, context gets better. Validated observations get promoted into structured expertise, so the next run starts with better knowledge of the codebase and less repeated discovery. Second, workflow gets sharper. The system looks at repeated failures and changes the reusable commands around the agent β ideally by adding only what consistently matters and cutting what doesnβt. That combination is where the gains compound. The agent starts with better context, but a lighter operating model. Thatβs a much healthier direction than what a lot of systems drift toward, which is more and more prompt text, more accumulated edge-case handling, and rising cost without much improvement in reliability. The artifact trail is what makes this workable. Each cycle leaves behind evidence: evaluator logs, raw findings, expertise updates, queued template patches, wiki notes. After enough cycles, youβre not just reacting to the last annoying failure. You can actually see what keeps recurring, what was already covered elsewhere, and which instructions are no longer doing useful work. That makes subtraction much easier to justify. And yes, thereβs a token-cost argument here too. A 2,000-token template invoked 50 times a day costs 100,000 tokens a day just to load. Trim 500 tokens of dead guardrails and the savings add up quickly. But the bigger win is clarity. In practice, models usually do better with fewer, more coherent rules than with long prompts full of defensive clutter. So shortening the workflow isnβt just cheaper. It often improves quality too. To me, this is the more interesting layer of agent design: not just agentic coding, but skill engineering. The reusable commands around an agent should themselves be under active improvement. Not based on vibes. Not based on one weird miss. Based on repeated observation and actual evidence. If your setup doesnβt have: - an evaluator producing structured findings - a release gate that can interpret blockers - a way to detect recurring failure patterns - and a human review step for sensitive workflow changes then thereβs a good chance the system will get more expensive over time, not less. Every miss turns into another sentence. Every edge case turns into another rule. Eventually youβre feeding the model more instructions and getting less leverage out of them. The better path is a tighter loop: less prompt where possible, more signal where it matters, and workflows that get sharper as the system learns. Thatβs what Iβm trying to build into Rebar. Rebar is open-source. The close-loop command, the meta-improve queue, and the release gate are in the repo. Play with it, and if you see a dead instruction in my own templates, send me a pull request.
0
150
Web Developer
(2)
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Eugene Avdalyan
Bull Run, USA
Lead designer at Shakuro, with a passion for marketing.
62
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Lead designer at Shakuro, with a passion for marketing.
13
Website for Florence-based industrial designer Mirko Romanelli (https://www.mirkoromanelli.com), designed with attention to detail & built using Webflow (https://webflow.com/made-in-webflow/website/mirkoromanelli). Building the website that could reflect Mirko Romanelliβs refined aesthetic and philosophy came with its own set of challenges. To bring his dedication to minimalism, concept-driven design, and storytelling into a web format, we needed to balance visual appeal with functional clarity carefully. We worked to capture the essence of his brand through deep research and thoughtfully designed elements. Bringing these concepts to life on Webflow also required technical precision to ensure smooth performance and interactivityβall without losing the minimalist feel. Full case β (https://shakuro.com/works/mirko-romanelli)
1
3
13
186
106
Website for Hyphen (https://www.hyphen.earth) β a sustainability platform helping companies measure and reduce their carbon footprint. Created a clean, responsive platform that boosted Hyphenβs credibility and user engagement in the carbon measurement field. Full case study (https://shakuro.com/works/hyphen) βοΈ
1
25
106
512
202
Our first post here on Contra π While weβre still exploring how the platform works, we wanted to share one of our recent case studies β a design project we created for Owari (https://owari.io/), a digital trading platform for West African oil & gas markets. For Owari, we focused on simplicity, clarity, and efficiency. Given the complexity of the data, our goal was to create a user experience that helps traders navigate and interpret market information with ease. π View full case study β (https://shakuro.com/works/owari)
1
78
202
899
36
Sales & Marketing Analytics Dashboard Concept As a growing digital agency, we spend a significant amount of time on marketing, content production, SEO, and social media analytics. Like many companies, we constantly switch between tools β GA, Ahrefs, Search Console, ad platforms, CRMs β making performance tracking fragmented. This inspired us to design a unified dashboard where all integrations come together, allowing teams to monitor KPIs, ROI, and sales metrics in one place. The design focuses on clarity, structured information hierarchy, and clean data visualizations. This concept reflects our vision of how cross-platform analytics could look when functionality, integrations, and thoughtful UX come together in a single ecosystem.
1
2
36
295
Web Developer
(3)
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Lucas Larose
Washington, USA
Web/Mobile Development | AI Integration| UI/UX Design Expert
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Web/Mobile Development | AI Integration| UI/UX Design Expert
1
MasterPOS | SaaS Webflow Website
1
3
1
Figma Design & Webflow Development for Impossible Cloud Network
1
3
1
Framer Website Design and Development from Scratch
1
3
1
Framer Website Design and Development
1
2
Web Developer
(8)
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Kevin Lewis
Rockville, USA
Sophisticated Web Designs Delivered Swiftly
5.0
Rating
3
Followers
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Sophisticated Web Designs Delivered Swiftly
0
Mud Ophanim Ceramics Site
0
7
0
Peter's Pretzels Landing Page
0
4
0
Example WordPress Landing Pages
0
10
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