Most designers spend hours hunting free clipart that looks like it was made in 2009. I used to be one of them.
Last month I was deep in a wedding invitation project, completely stuck. Everything I found online felt flat, generic, lifeless. I needed something that actually looked *painted* β imperfect edges, real texture, the kind of warmth that makes a bride cry happy tears.
Then I stumbled across this at
klimm.gumroad.com/l/emnmj and genuinely stopped scrolling.
Here's what I found inside:
β 100 hand-painted watercolor elements (not AI, not stock β actual brush strokes)
β Roses, peonies, wreaths, loose stems, full bouquets
β Transparent PNG backgrounds so they drop into ANY design instantly
β High resolution, meaning they scale without going muddy
The whole thing is $6. Six dollars.
I've paid more for a single Canva element that looked worse.
What made me share this wasn't just the quality β it was how *fast* my workflow changed. I finished three invitation suites in a weekend. My client said the florals looked "like something from a boutique stationery brand."
That's the kind of creative unlock that quietly changes everything.
If you work in Canva, Photoshop, Procreate, print design, or even just make pretty things for fun β check this out before your next project hits a wall.
What's the one design resource you wish you'd found sooner?
#WatercolorClipart #DigitalDesign #GraphicDesign #InvitationDesign #DesignResources #CreativeTools