Freelancers in Longmont
Freelancers in Longmont
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Kimi Brown
pro
Firestone, USA
Kajabi Expert, Business Consultant, Conversion Strategist
5.0
Rating
18
Followers
Expert
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Kajabi Expert, Business Consultant, Conversion Strategist
0
Post In-Person Conference Course Funnel
0
19
1
Kajabi Launch Execution Strategy + Support
1
15
0
K.I.S.S. Call (Best Kiss She Ever Had!)
0
8
0
Offer Clarity + Messaging Overhaul
0
8
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Danny Colpas
Westminster, USA
Senior Designer | Branding, Comms, Presentations
5.0
Rating
3
Followers
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Senior Designer | Branding, Comms, Presentations
0
Brand Identity & Packaging Strategy for SOAR
0
18
0
Outsight – Brand Expansion & Template System
0
8
0
Johnson & Johnson – D&I Rebrand (Concept Campaign)
0
17
0
Johnson & Johnson – HR Next: Future of Work Campaign
0
31
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Ross Langley
pro
Boulder, USA
Fractional Product Design for Small Software Teams
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Fractional Product Design for Small Software Teams
0
Building the world's first AI platform for hardware teams
0
6
0
Extensibility of core and third-party software
0
7
0
Transforming observability for dev and tech ops personnel
0
3
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Hyung Joo Kim
Boulder, USA
Build a LALATOWN of your own, one story at a time.
New to Contra
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Build a LALATOWN of your own, one story at a time.
0
Lucky Days & Little Signs The LALATOWN Monthly Auspicious Calendar · July 2026 Hello, neighbors. As I promised in the June edition, here is our July Lucky Days & Little Signs calendar. July is just around the corner, and I thought it would be fun to share another little piece of Korean tradition with you. If you’ve been visiting LALATOWN for a while, you probably know that I love collecting the small stories people carry through generations. Some are recipes. Some are neighborhood sayings. Some are simply little beliefs that make everyday life feel more thoughtful. This calendar is one of them. In Korea, many people still look at the lunar calendar when choosing special days. Weddings, moving to a new home, opening a business, or even beginning an important project are sometimes planned around auspicious dates. Another traditional belief is that, on certain days, particular directions are best avoided for major activities. Whether you see these traditions as folklore, cultural wisdom, or simply beautiful stories, they’ve always been part of Korean everyday life. For me, this calendar isn’t about predicting the future. It’s a gentle reminder to move through life with a little more awareness—to pause, notice the season, and remember that we’re sharing this world with nature rather than trying to control it. When I was in middle school, I remember my mother suddenly developing severe pain in her leg. A local fortune teller asked her an unexpected question: “Did you recently move any living plants?” She had. The fortune teller suggested offering a little water mixed with coarse salt to the plants she had moved, explaining that she may have unknowingly disturbed the spirit of the place. My mother followed the suggestion, and over the following days she felt much better. Was it coincidence? Faith? Tradition? Or simply a meaningful ritual? I still don’t know. But I’ve never forgotten that story. Even today, whenever I see construction beginning, trees being dug up, or the ground being disturbed, I find myself paying a little more attention. Perhaps it’s only habit. Perhaps it’s respect. Either way, these small traditions remind me that the earth isn’t just scenery—it has its own quiet presence. That feeling inspired this little calendar. The green dots mark days that are traditionally considered especially lucky. The letters (E, S, W, N) simply point to directions that some traditional calendars suggest being mindful of on that day. They’re not rules. They’re little signs. Tiny conversations with an old tradition that has traveled through generations. If you’re curious about Korean folk beliefs and the spiritual traditions surrounding nature and place, there’s one book I warmly recommend. Years ago, I even had the opportunity to help edit part of this book, and it’s still one of the most thoughtful introductions I’ve found on the subject. Whether you follow these traditions or simply enjoy learning about different cultures, I hope this little calendar adds a bit of curiosity, imagination, and kindness to your July. Welcome to another month in LALATOWN.
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8
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Lala All the Way I made this staircase about ten years ago. To be honest, I still don’t think of it as art. At the time, we simply did not have the money to replace everything that was old, worn out, or falling apart. So I did what I always did. I fixed it myself. And I loved it. I loved looking at something tired and forgotten and imagining what it could become. Back then, I did a lot of projects around the house. I painted things. I repaired things. I covered things with paper and glue. I transformed old cabinets, mirrors, tables, chairs, and whatever else I could get my hands on. Looking back now, I realize that my Craft Design background never really left me. It just found a different place to live. Instead of galleries, it lived in staircases. Instead of canvases, it lived in old furniture. Instead of expensive materials, it lived in leftover paint, scraps of paper, and things that other people might have thrown away. I have always loved upcycling. I love giving something a second chance. I love finding beauty where nobody is looking. I have lived in this house for almost thirty years, and I will be leaving it soon. Not every memory here is a good one. But when I look at this staircase, I remember the version of myself who was excited to make something with her own hands. The version of myself who could spend hours with paper, glue, paint, and a new idea. That is the memory I want to keep. And I have a feeling I am not done yet. Who knows how many old chairs, forgotten tables, worn-out cabinets, and strange little treasures I will rescue in the future? I am actually excited about it. I will keep sharing them here. Because that is what LALATOWN is. LALATOWN is not about pretending everything is perfect. It is about finding something worth keeping, even when life gets messy. And somehow turning it into a story. Welcome to the neighborhood. — Hyungjoo Kim Caretaker of LALATOWN Studio
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98
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This Is My Kind of Play I wanted to make a demo. Not a perfect demo. Not a tutorial. Not even a finished piece. I wanted to show how I play. This first demo is a little bit like those giant makeup palettes I used to buy when I was younger. The ones that came with every eyeshadow color, blush, and everything else packed into one box. I could never leave anything behind. So yes, this demo has a little bit of everything. A Spanish balcony. A tteokbokki stand. A few neighbors. A few stories. And probably too many things happening at once. But that is also LALATOWN. LALATOWN does not exist for everyone. It exists for one person at a time. The person building it. You. Some people think world-building means creating rules. LALATOWN is the opposite. Maybe there is a tteokbokki stand under a Spanish balcony. Maybe Franky, the Mayor of LALATOWN, is quietly watching over the neighborhood. Maybe Dolswe is making sure nobody steals a dad joke and gets away with it. Maybe the lady carrying kimchi is on her way to a friend’s house. Maybe the mysterious man sitting near the café is a time traveler. Or maybe he invented tteokbokki. Who knows? It’s your LALATOWN. You decide. That is why I don’t think this is only for artists. An illustrator can use it. A child can use it. A grandmother can use it. You can create your own coloring pages, your own neighborhood, your own stories, and your own little world. These brushes are simply building blocks. The stories belong to you. In LALATOWN, kindness is the currency. Nobody needs money. Nobody needs to be important. Nobody needs permission to imagine. You just start building. And before you know it, a neighborhood appears. This is my kind of play.
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118
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This is a quick demo of how I build a little corner of LALATOWN using my Procreate brush set. It starts with a few buildings, then colors, neighbors, stories, and all the little details that make a neighborhood feel alive. In LALATOWN, this is not just drawing. It’s creative play. You can add speech bubbles, invent characters, create tiny stories, and build a place that belongs only to you. Maybe there’s a tteokbokki stand under a Spanish balcony. Because it’s LALATOWN. Anything is possible.
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95
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Kevin Kroneberger
Loveland, USA
Branding, Packaging Design and Illustration
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Branding, Packaging Design and Illustration
2
Southerly Fishing Gear: Brand Identity
2
4
0
Smallhold Harvest Coffee
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3
0
Simms Fishing Apparel Design
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1
1
Guapo Taco Identity
1
5
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Abigail Biegert
Arvada, USA
Creative Branding and Design Solutions
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Creative Branding and Design Solutions
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Brand Design | Piper Electric
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20
0
National Conference of State Legislatures Annual Report Design
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21
0
Beautiful Designs for Small Businesses & Nonprofits
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12
0
Branding for a Tech Startup
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14
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Justin Rudnick
Longmont, USA
Empowering Local Businesses with Google
1x
Hired
5.0
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Empowering Local Businesses with Google
0
Google Business Profile
0
43
0
Google Analytics
0
37
0
Photography
0
15
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Keith Danielson
Boulder, USA
Passionate, Exclusive, Custom Music
1x
Hired
5.0
Rating
1
Followers
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Passionate, Exclusive, Custom Music
0
Selected Ambient Works
0
29
0
Some Songs from My Portfolio
0
20
0
Cyoti - Reality
0
8
0
In the Rye
0
8
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