This is another one of those "back in the day" stories.
I believe that I worked on this project around 18 months ago, and I found out that some things have been broken since then. Honestly, now I would like to do a whole redesign of this website and adjust it to fit the purpose.
I haven't worked on this project from start to finish, but instead, I was working on adjusting and tweaking a few things, so I was not able to go as far as I would like to and as far as I think this website needs to go in order to attract more customers.
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Interactive Webflow Hero
Mouse-driven hero background built with Webflow and JavaScript.
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Some projects are one-time engagements, while others grow into long-term collaborations. This is one of those projects.
I started working on it over a year ago, and I’m truly grateful for the opportunity to continue collaborating with @Fiona Fitzpatrick as my client. I’m confident and excited about what we’ll build together in the years ahead.
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After 70+ Webflow builds for clients, I’m finally working on my own portfolio site.
Here’s a first take on the homepage hero. I know it needs refinement and probably a better structure, so I’d love feedback, especially from UI/UX folks.
I’m focusing on clarity and conversion over heavy animations. Open to ideas 👀
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Based on the metrics, it looks like you’ve been enjoying these “back in time” posts, so here’s another one.
I worked on this Webflow project around a year ago. It’s a 20+ page website with multiple CMS collections and a solid example of the kind of projects I was involved in at that time.
Sharing it here without overthinking it.
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“This will be the easiest project in your life.”
Back in 2022, after finishing my first Webflow project, I accepted a job where the only task was to make a Webflow website responsive.
The client was a WordPress developer who built the site only for desktop. I thought, "How hard could it be?"
Then I opened a project—chaos.
Every element was position: absolute, manually moved. Across a 5-page static site. With a $100 budget.
What was supposed to be an easy project turned into ~40 hours of work.
But here’s the twist:
After my second Webflow project, I received a review that boosted my profile and clients started coming in.
That “easy” project was one of the hardest I’ve done in a while, but it shaped my skills the most.
Lesson: Don’t judge projects only by money. Some are investments in skills, portfolio, and reviews.
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Another Webflow project I worked on, but this time, from about a year ago.
This Webflow CMS website was built with structure in mind from day one. The goal was to make content updates easy for the client without breaking the design or layout.
Looking at it now, there are things I’d definitely adjust today, but the core structure still holds up well. Clean page and CMS architecture, along with responsiveness across desktop, tablet, and mobile, were priorities even back then.
It’s fascinating how reviewing older projects highlights not just what you’d change, but also what you’d keep.
P.S. Curious how often you look back at your older work and reassess it?
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Almost 2 years ago, I was working on this CMS Webflow website for a medical aesthetics brand.
When I look at it now, I notice a lot of things I would do differently today. At the same time, it clearly shows the foundation I had back then and how much I’ve grown since the beginning of 2024.
Lately I’ve noticed many Webflow sites look great on desktop, solid standard mobile portrait, but tablet and mobile landscape views often get neglected. With new devices like the Fold series coming out, making sure your site works smoothly across all screen sizes is more important than ever.
I’m proud to say that since 2022 I’ve been building fully responsive Webflow websites that adapt beautifully across every breakpoint. Because great design means every user gets the best experience no matter their device.