Freelance Illustrators in San Francisco
Freelance Illustrators in San Francisco
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Scott DS Young
pro
San Francisco, USA
Visual Storytelling & Digital Communication Systems Designer
$10k+
Earned
19x
Hired
5.0
Rating
132
Followers
Expert
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Visual Storytelling & Digital Communication Systems Designer
2
Narrative Visual System for Children’s Media
2
30
1
Bound Therapeutics — Brand & Pitch System for Biotech
1
26
0
Healthcare Infographic & Motion Design
0
28
0
Logo Brand Identity
0
9
Illustrator
(14)
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Ashlyn Jackson
pro
San Francisco, USA
Graphic Designer & Collaborator
$10k+
Earned
8x
Hired
5.0
Rating
446
Followers
Top
Hired
+1
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Graphic Designer & Collaborator
6
Flatland: A Geometric Card Game Adventure
6
94
33
Bachan's | Social Media Designer
33
346
7
A'last Haircare | Logo & Product Design
7
132
11
Seeing my design work displayed on the side of a San Francisco Muni bus fills me with immense pride and joy. There’s something incredibly special about witnessing a project you poured your creativity into as it moves through the city, reaching so many people in their everyday lives. Collaborating with the Creative Youth Awards over the past few months for their upcoming celebration has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career. Knowing that my designs are helping to amplify their mission and celebrate young talent is incredibly fulfilling, and seeing the bus ad out in the world has made the entire journey even more meaningful. Moments like these remind me why I love what I do as a designer.
5
11
511
Illustrator
(3)
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Molly Mittal
max
San Mateo, USA
Product & Visual Designer · Brand Identity · UI/UX
2x
Hired
5.0
Rating
52
Followers
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Product & Visual Designer · Brand Identity · UI/UX
8
I turned a photo into a forever stamp. Here's why that matters. Every relationship has a place. A trip that changed everything. A moment you keep going back to. A location that just means something. But those memories live on your phone, buried under 4,000 other photos and slowly, they fade. I built a FLORA Technique called Collectible Memory Stamps that turns any photo and location into a custom illustrated postage stamp. The one you see here? Ojai Valley, CA. Est. 2024. A couple, a meadow, a sunset that looked exactly like that. It took minutes to make. It looks like it took a lifetime to earn. Who it's for: Couples. Wedding planners. Travel photographers. Anyone who believes some memories deserve more than a highlight reel. What you put in: A photo What you get out: A stamp that feels like it should be on the wall, not in a camera roll. Try it → https://app.flora.ai/techniques/photo-stamp-creator
1
8
293
6
Compani is a whimsical café concept designed for people and their pets to relax, snack, and sip together. From branding to spatial storytelling, the goal was to create a cozy, colour-forward world that feels equal parts playful and premium. This fictional project explores how branding can be immersive, emotional, and downright fun especially when it brings pets into the picture. Compani blends bold colour palettes, charming illustrations, and thoughtful customer experience design to craft a café where dogs sip Puppuccinos, cats purr over Mewcchiatos, and bunny guests nibble Croissniffs while their humans enjoy a latte and good company. Key deliverables included: Logo & Identity Design with a quirky, pet-inspired wordmark Custom Doodles & Iconography featuring a cast of café-going animals Punny Pet Menu Illustrations (Spaghootie & Meatballs, anyone?) Loyalty Card Design with playful copywriting 3D Pop-Up Café Concept showcasing branding in space Realistic & Stylized Café Scenes for storytelling and social use Compani is more than a café, it’s a reminder that every moment shared with our pets is worth celebrating.
2
6
332
3
Yogi Green Tea Packaging
3
18
44
Project title STALL — Your farmers market, alive. A swipe-to-shop farmers market companion that connects local vendors with regulars before Saturday ever arrives. The problem Every Saturday, the same thing happens. You show up to the farmers market at 10am. The ramp vendor you wanted is sold out by 9. You forgot cash. You walk past a honey stall three times because you can't remember if you already bought some. And that new mushroom farm you heard about? Gone before you spotted them. On the vendor side, it's just as frustrating. Small farmers wake up at 4am, load the truck, drive an hour, and have no lightweight way to tell their regulars — the people who actually want what they grow — "I have asparagus this Saturday. Come find me." STALL fixes both sides of that problem. What STALL does STALL is a two-sided farmers market app built around one weekly ritual: Saturday morning. For shoppers: Follow vendors at your local market Swipe through a weekly produce deck — right to add to your list, left to skip — exactly like Bumble, but for ramps and sourdough Get a Friday evening digest: what your vendors have this week, your auto-built shopping list, and where each stall is on the map Pre-reserve high-demand seasonal items before you leave the house Discover first-of-season arrivals with a "what's new this week" spotlight For vendors: Post a weekly inventory update in 3 taps — what you're bringing, quantities, price Reach your regulars directly before market day Manage pre-reservations without a complicated system The app celebrates the seasonal nature of farmers markets — ramps in April, strawberries in June, squash in October. Every week feels like something worth showing up for. How I built this with Google Stitch STALL was designed and prototyped entirely using Google Stitch as the primary build tool, with Figma used only for initial wireframing. The workflow: Day 1 — Brand and wireframes I started by defining the brand: the name, palette (Pumpkin Spice Forest — a warm amber, fern green, mauve, and cream system), and illustration direction. I wireframed the three core flows — swipe deck, Friday digest, and vendor post — before touching Stitch. Day 2 — Into Stitch I imported my Figma file directly into Stitch using the .fig import feature. From there I used streaming generation to build each screen live on the canvas — watching the splash screen, onboarding flow, and homepage assemble in real time was genuinely remarkable. The HTML-native canvas meant every animation I added — card tilt on swipe, drawer slide-up, bento tile stagger — rendered exactly as it would in production. Key Stitch prompts used: "Add a swipe gesture to the produce card stack — right swipe shows a green Added overlay with 5° card tilt, left swipe shows a mauve Skipped overlay with -5° tilt" "Make the shopping list items stream in one by one with 120ms stagger on page load" "Add a bottom drawer that slides up from the vendor card with spring easing — show the farm bio, full inventory list, and two action buttons" "Build the Friday digest screen — vendor items animate in sequentially, the seasonal spotlight card pulses gently" "Export web assets and deploy to Netlify" In-place edits I used: Swapped the swipe overlay color from red to mauve to match brand Adjusted the bento grid gap from 8px to 6px after seeing it render on canvas Changed the CTA button from outlined to filled after in-place visual comparison Rewrote the seasonal spotlight copy directly on the canvas without regenerating What Stitch made possible that nothing else could: The swipe gesture interaction, the drawer spring animation, and the staggered list streaming — all three of these would have taken days to hand-code. In Stitch, they were prompt-driven and live on the canvas within minutes. The gap between "designed" and "interactive prototype" collapsed entirely. Screens delivered Splash screen — farmer illustration, full-bleed cream background Onboarding screen 1 — market basket illustration, "Your market, every Saturday" Onboarding screen 2 — swipe mechanic explainer with card UI Onboarding screen 3 — Friday digest bento preview Homepage — bento grid with market header, seasonal spotlight, list, map preview, swipe deck, streak tracker Swipe deck — card front, vendor expand drawer, swipe right (added), swipe left (skipped) Friday digest — streaming vendor list, seasonal spotlight, auto-built shopping list Market day map — vendor stall grid, spot numbers, live confirmation states Vendor post flow — 3-tap inventory update screen Design decisions worth noting The swipe mechanic — Borrowing the Bumble swipe pattern for produce discovery was the conceptual breakthrough. It transforms a passive browse into an active, satisfying decision. Every right swipe builds your list. Every left swipe still shows you where the vendor is on the market map — skipping is never permanent. The Friday digest as the hero feature — Most apps make you come to them. The Friday evening push notification with a personalised market brief is the one moment where STALL comes to you. It changes Saturday morning from reactive to intentional. Bento homepage — Instead of a scrolling feed, the homepage gives you everything at a glance: your market, your list, the seasonal moment, your vendors. Seven tiles, seven pieces of information, zero scrolling. The color system — Pumpkin (#E8872A), Fern (#728040), Mauve (#B07090), Cream (#FDFAF6), and Moss (#4A5228). Every color has one job. Pumpkin is interactive. Fern is seasonal and confirmed. Mauve is reserved and streaks. Cream is every surface. Nothing competes. What I learned Stitch genuinely changes the prototyping workflow. The moment I stopped thinking of it as a design tool and started thinking of it as a build tool — one where the canvas is the product, not a picture of the product — everything accelerated. The in-place edit feature is the one I'll keep coming back to: being able to change a color, rewrite copy, or swap a component without regenerating the whole screen is the difference between iteration and rework. STALL started as a hackathon idea. After building it in Stitch, it feels like something real. Live Prototype: https://stitch.withgoogle.com/preview/8229547464152593644?node-id=e53124995cda49808685283be978dc8c
50
44
1.1K
Illustrator
(3)
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Clara MacDonell
San Francisco, USA
Experienced Designer: Elevating Brands with Care
5.0
Rating
6
Followers
Top
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Experienced Designer: Elevating Brands with Care
1
Startup branding + web design
1
15
20
Branding for team building company
20
108
0
Flippy's diner
0
31
1
Organic honey branding
1
13
Illustrator
(6)
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Ysa Flores
pro
San Francisco, USA
Design for the creatively ambitious.
5.0
Rating
30
Followers
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Design for the creatively ambitious.
0
The Artisan Archive
0
59
0
Design of Darkness
0
24
0
Blanc
0
43
0
Chronicle Books
0
66
Illustrator
(3)
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Haley Arnold
San Francisco, USA
Graphic Designer + Visual Artist
2x
Hired
5.0
Rating
2
Followers
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Graphic Designer + Visual Artist
0
Logo and T-Shirt Design for Union or Bust Podcast
0
11
0
Logo Design and Merch for Feb29
0
8
0
Event Menus for Queen's Eleven and Room for Milly
0
26
0
Holiday Bar Pop-up Marketing for Queen's Eleven
0
24
Illustrator
(9)
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Catherine Wu
San Francisco, USA
Crafting creative brand designs & illustrations.
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Crafting creative brand designs & illustrations.
0
Poster and Illustration Design for Apotheosis
0
11
0
Illustrations for Floral Tea Cards
0
28
0
Brand Design for Zac's Sweet Shop
0
18
0
Product Design for Cafe Mei
0
16
Illustrator
(2)
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Emma K. Clark
San Francisco, USA
Brand design | Illustration | Graphic design
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Brand design | Illustration | Graphic design
0
One Medical social media
0
10
0
Give the flu the cold shoulder
0
3
0
Phoria (brand design)
0
4
0
Don't feed the flu
0
2
Illustrator
(3)
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