I always wondered why some people are so against using templates. Personally, I think it’s a smart move and my clients love the results, and they honestly don’t care if I’m using a template or not. The coders who bash templates are usually the same ones using pre-made components and libraries from other people anyway. In the end, clients just want a great website that helps their business, and templates help us deliver that faster. I mean, isn’t using a template basically the same as using component libraries like Relume?
yep!!! now that im getting into coding im using more and more components, so I don't really get bashing on templates. Plus, ive youre just starting out and want to show some work easily why not
I’m a Lead UX Researcher/Designer. I have yet to come across a WebFlow template on the marketplace that: 1. Wasn’t broken or had some bug clear as day. 2. Consistent grammatical errors. 3. Lacked out of the box demos for GDPR and standard cookie policy (I did find one with a slick cookie policy) 4. Passed WCAG. 5. Passed 508 compliance. 6. Passed WebAIM. 7. Language modules that were dismissible. And I could go on. I know for a fact most WebFlow devs don’t know what most of these are. If you’re seasoned and have done work for FAANG, you immediately know most if not all these themes are trash. That might be why some people are against themes. The WebFlow marketplace is like ThemeForest 2.0 all over again. Whatever you’re charging your clients I could charge double by building something with better attention to detail, government regulations and overall a better user experience.
Here are some recent templates I found that I like, hope you guys enjoy them :) More technical tutorials coming soon subscribe :)
Thank you so much ❤ for sharing these designs, you are one of those creators who actually put in the effort and share really useful stuff.
thanks man :) really happy to read this message
Thanks for sharing these amazing websites 💖💖
Glad you like them!
I always wondered why some people are so against using templates. Personally, I think it’s a smart move and my clients love the results, and they honestly don’t care if I’m using a template or not. The coders who bash templates are usually the same ones using pre-made components and libraries from other people anyway. In the end, clients just want a great website that helps their business, and templates help us deliver that faster. I mean, isn’t using a template basically the same as using component libraries like Relume?
yep!!! now that im getting into coding im using more and more components, so I don't really get bashing on templates. Plus, ive youre just starting out and want to show some work easily why not
@@ArnauRosyes, its best what you can do, create own componets. I usually grab them from templates 😂❤
I’m a Lead UX Researcher/Designer.
I have yet to come across a WebFlow template on the marketplace that:
1. Wasn’t broken or had some bug clear as day.
2. Consistent grammatical errors.
3. Lacked out of the box demos for GDPR and standard cookie policy (I did find one with a slick cookie policy)
4. Passed WCAG.
5. Passed 508 compliance.
6. Passed WebAIM.
7. Language modules that were dismissible.
And I could go on. I know for a fact most WebFlow devs don’t know what most of these are.
If you’re seasoned and have done work for FAANG, you immediately know most if not all these themes are trash.
That might be why some people are against themes. The WebFlow marketplace is like ThemeForest 2.0 all over again.
Whatever you’re charging your clients I could charge double by building something with better attention to detail, government regulations and overall a better user experience.
why your eyebrow so thick and you don't make them thinner? i am just asking, not hating. you have a beautiful face and the bear thing is not for you