Maximalist / Eclectic
Also known as: More is more, Layered aesthetic, Anti-minimalist, Pattern mixing
Every surface is a canvas. Layered pattern on pattern, color on color, texture on texture. Creates a sense of joy, wonder, and personality.
Color Palette
Click any swatch to copy its hex code.
Typography
Heading Font
FrauncesFraunces
Big, opinionated, personality-forward serif that refuses to be ignored.
Body Font
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. Merriweather.Merriweather
Readable serif that adds to the 'editorial chaos' feel without sacrificing clarity.
Accent / Display Font
PacificoPacifico
For whimsical labels, tags, and decorative text elements.
Key Characteristics
layout
Collage-style compositions, overlapping elements, mixed grid and free-placement layouts, scrapbook aesthetics
imagery
Mixed media — photography, illustration, pattern, and typography all coexisting in one frame
icons
Illustrated, varied in style — deliberately inconsistent is acceptable
textures
Tapestry patterns, Persian rug borders, wallpaper-inspired backgrounds, mixed collage elements
spacing
Deliberately dense — negative space is minimal and intentional
Usage Guide
When to Use
Use when the brand personality IS the product — when personality differentiation is the core value proposition. Perfect for independent restaurants, cafés, or boutiques that want to be talked about and remembered.
When NOT to Use
Avoid for any brand where clarity, trust, and professionalism are non-negotiable. Also avoid for brands without strong creative direction — maximalism without deliberate intention quickly becomes visual noise.
Live Preview
Simulated café website using this theme
Our Signature Menu
Real Website Examples
Sketch London
Each room of this art-dining institution has its own world; the website reflects this through layered visual identity across multiple visual themes.
La Semilla
A plant-based Latin restaurant with a playful, design-forward website featuring quirky typography and a strong, eclectic visual identity.
Liberty London
The legendary London department store with a maximalist identity rooted in William Morris prints and Victorian eclecticism.