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Published on
September 8, 2022

10 free design tools that every designer should know

Joshua Sauder
Joshua Sauder, Owner at Absurdity
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Efficiency is essential. Over the years, I’ve put together a collection of paid and free design resources that I commonly use when I work. If you’re looking for free fonts to improve your typography, icons to modernize your designs, or stock images to inject humanity into your work — here are some free resources!

A screenshot of the Fontshare website

Fontshare

https://www.fontshare.com

I like Fontshare more than Google Fonts. There, I said it. Fontshare is simply astounding. They somehow have managed to curate a collection of top-tier typeface selections and keep it free. I have no idea how. Their typographic selection is full of excellent options.

Take a look. You might find the perfect font for your next Webflow project.

A screenshot of the Accessible Brand Colors website

Accessible Brand Colors

https://abc.useallfive.com

If you’re creating non-accessible websites in 2022… stop it. Check your color contrasts and follow them. I know it might feel like an extra step in your process, but it’ll quickly become a standard step in your process.

This online tool was created by Use All Five, and it’s straightforward to use.

A screenshot of the Fontshare website

Feather Icons

https://feathericons.com

A criminally good icon set, free and open source? How? I have no idea, but I’m not asking questions. Feather Icons are a beautiful, tastefully designed set of line icons ready for your next Figma project. Check ‘em out!

A screenshot of the Octopus website

Octopus

https://octopus.do/sitemap

We use Octopus for every single site we build here at Absurdity. Simply put, it’s the best lightweight sitemapping tool I’ve found. Know a better one? Let me know. While it is a paid tool, you can create a single site for free (and then delete that site when you’re done, rinse and repeat).

The Octopus devs are amazing, too. They’re always updating the tool with new features. I’m a huge fan.

A screenshot of the NoisePNG website

NoisePNG

http://noisepng.com

This one’s simple. Sometimes you need a nice grain texture with a transparent background. Make one here.

A screenshot of the Pexels website

Pexels

https://www.pexels.com

Everyone knows about Unsplash, but I don’t see as much about Pexels. Similarly, it’s a collection of free-to-use stock images, and it has a large selection. Some images are overlapped uploads with Unsplash, but it also has many unique options. Next time you’re looking for stock images for your site, take a look.

A screenshot of the Mixkit website

Mixkit

https://mixkit.co

For all you video creators out there, Mixkit has a ton of free assets, stock footage, and motion templates. It’s like Unsplash or Pexels for video footage. They also have high-quality music and sound effects available.

A screenshot of the New Old Stock website

New Old Stock

https://nos.twnsnd.co

One of the most unusual free stock photo sites, New Old Stock might come in handy when you’re looking for something a bit more aged. They find interesting old images that you can use for, well, anything.

Whether for texture, inspiration, or background images, like a fine wine, their images get better with time.

A screenshot of the WebGradients website

WebGradients

https://webgradients.com

Sometimes you just need some smooooooooth gradients. These gradients are built with CSS, so they’re ready to copy and paste into your project. If you’re using these with Webflow, just use the hex codes to create the gradient as a background.

A screenshot of the Lost + Taken website

Lost + Taken

https://lostandtaken.com

Whether it’s for illustration or web, adding textures to your work can have interesting results. Lost and Taken has a decent collection of some of the common textures you might be looking for. Make something weird with them!

If you know any other free design tools, let us know on Twitter!