Freelancers in LongmontFreelancers in Longmont
Kajabi Expert, Business Consultant, Conversion Strategist
5.0
Rating
19
Followers
Kajabi Expert, Business Consultant, Conversion Strategist
Senior Designer | Branding, Comms, Presentations
5.0
Rating
3
Followers
Senior Designer | Branding, Comms, Presentations
Fractional Product Design for Small Software Teams
Fractional Product Design for Small Software Teams
digital artist | motion graphics | web3 | nft
digital artist | motion graphics | web3 | nft
Cover image for I’m opening up a few
I’m opening up a few spots in May for a Local Visibility Tune-Up. This is for local businesses that already have a website, Google Business Profile, and social presence… but everything feels a little scattered, dusty, or underwhelming. You paid for the website. You claimed the Google profile. You post when you can. But is it actually helping people find you, trust you, and contact you? freshmints.online/local-seo-visibility-tune-up (https://freshmints.online/local-seo-visibility-tune-up) That’s where this tune-up comes in. For $750, I’ll take a focused look at your local digital presence and clean up the pieces that directly affect visibility, credibility, and conversions: • Website first impression • Local SEO basics • Google Business Profile • Social media presence • Search visibility gaps • Quick-win content and copy improvements • What needs fixing first, not someday in a fantasy marketing meeting The goal is simple: Help your business look sharper, show up better, and give potential customers fewer reasons to bounce. No agency maze. No account reps. No support tickets. You work directly with the person doing the work. If you’re a local business owner and your online presence needs a little polish before summer gets moving, book a free consultation here... freshmints.online/local-seo-visibility-tune-up (https://freshmints.online/local-seo-visibility-tune-up) Fresh Mints LLC Local visibility, SEO, content, and digital cleanup for real businesses that would rather be found than forgotten.
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35
Story-driven illustrator creating worlds for books & brands.
New to Contra
Story-driven illustrator creating worlds for books & brands.
Cover image for I Think LALATOWN Is Growing
I Think LALATOWN Is Growing on Its Own Usually, my creative process is pretty simple. I paint first. Then I look at one tiny object in the painting and think, “Hmm… that little teapot deserves its own brush.” Five minutes later… “Well… if the teapot gets a brush, the chair shouldn’t feel left out.” Then the lantern joins. Then the bakery sign. Then the flower pot. Then the tiny cat. Before I know it… I’ve made another brush set. Apparently, this is how LALATOWN operates. And honestly? I’m not complaining. A few months ago, I had no idea making Procreate brushes would become one of my favorite parts of being an illustrator. I really thought, “Maybe a few people will like these.” Instead… something much sweeter happened. I have regular customers now. … Wait. Did I really just write that? Yes. I have regular customers. I’m trying very hard to act like a responsible adult… but every time someone comes back for another brush set… I quietly celebrate. (Okay… not that quietly.) Life has been complicated lately. Some chapters are heavier than others. Sometimes you wonder if you’re moving forward at all. And then… a bright little piece of news quietly appears. Someone discovers my shop. Someone comes back. Someone leaves a kind review. One person even told me that my shop immediately caught their eye. I don’t think they realized how much that sentence meant to me. Sometimes a single kind sentence shows up exactly when you need it. So yes… life can be messy. But it also has a funny habit of leaving little gifts along the way. Lately, I’ve been noticing those gifts more often. Somewhere along the way, another thought started growing. What if LALATOWN doesn’t stop with one painting? What if one painting becomes twenty? Then fifty. Maybe one day… one hundred. Not because I planned it that way. Just because every story seems to invite another one. And one neighborhood somehow keeps leading to another. Then one morning… Bukchon quietly raised its hand. “Excuse me…” “My turn?” … Oh. Right. Bukchon. The last Korean neighborhood painting I created already had people walking toward Bukchon. Looking back… I think I already knew where I was going. Bukchon has always been one of my favorite places in Seoul. Not because it’s famous. Because it’s filled with my own memories. My sister spent time there. My nephew lived nearby when he was little. We wandered those streets together. We ate kalguksu. Stopped for patbingsu. Peeked into little shops full of handmade treasures. And somehow… I never came home with just one tiny souvenir. It was always… “Well… this keyring is cute.” “Oh, and this hair clip.” “Ooooh… look at this little ornament.” You know how that goes. Last year I went back to Korea. Guess what? I was so busy… I never even made it to Bukchon. So I made a decision. If I can’t visit the Bukchon I love just yet… I’ll paint the Bukchon that’s been living inside my memories. Not an exact copy. Not a travel guide. My Bukchon. LALATOWN Bukchon. This time, I decided to flip my process upside down. Usually I paint first… and make brushes afterward. This time… I’m making all the tiny treasures first. Traditional ornaments. Beautiful earrings. Hanbok embroidery. Shop signs. Lanterns. Decorative patterns. Little everyday objects that quietly tell stories. Because I realized something. Sometimes a neighborhood isn’t remembered because of the buildings. It’s remembered because of the tiny details that make you stop and smile. So… welcome to LALATOWN Bukchon. This is where tiny Korean objects become neighbors. Where little memories quietly become illustrations. And where one small detail somehow always inspires another. I have a feeling this neighborhood is going to grow for a very long time. And honestly… I can’t wait to see who moves in next. 
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5
Cover image for When a Tool Becomes Part
When a Tool Becomes Part of Your Art People sometimes ask where my work belongs. When I studied craft design, every project had a clear purpose. It had to solve a problem. Later, when I studied fine art, I was expected to express my own world. Learning to write artist statements was one of the hardest parts for me. I grew up in an education system where expressing your own thoughts so openly wasn’t something we practiced very much. These days, I realize I’m standing somewhere between those two worlds. I build my own little world through LALATOWN, but I also keep making the tools I wish I had. That’s how my brushes began. And recently, that’s how these color palettes were born. While painting, I kept stopping. “Not this color.” “Not that one.” I would spend one or two minutes searching for the next color instead of painting. Eventually I realized the palette itself was the problem. So instead of creating another pretty collection of colors, I designed a working tool for myself. LALATOWN Flow Palette was arranged so neighboring colors naturally work together. Moving across or down the palette feels intuitive, letting me spend less time searching and more time painting. Then I created LALATOWN Hidden Colors. These aren’t louder colors. They’re the ones I always found myself wishing existed—the in-between greens, unusual blues, softened purples, and quiet colors that are surprisingly difficult to find when you’re in the middle of painting. My earlier palettes were created simply because I loved beautiful colors. These two are different. They were built to save time. They help me stay inside the creative flow instead of interrupting it. Sometimes the things I make for myself become the things I end up sharing. Welcome to my little general store. Welcome to LALATOWN.
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Branding, Packaging Design and Illustration
Branding, Packaging Design and Illustration
Empowering Local Businesses with Google
1x
Hired
5.0
Rating
Empowering Local Businesses with Google