Chill, You’re Still Creative: How To Keep The Ideas Flowing

title "chill, you're still creative" on a calming light pink, blue and white ink drop background

Creativity doesn’t show up just because you stare at a blank screen and will it into existence. It usually appears when you’ve been feeding your brain good stuff and giving it a bit of room to wander. In a way, it’s like going to the gym, but for your ideas: small, regular reps, not one massive “creative sprint” once every six months.

In today’s blog, I’m sharing a few simple ways to keep your creativity going, plus a bunch of brilliant websites and communities you can dip into when you need that spark. Bookmark a couple, build your own little inspiration routine, and you’ll never be fully “out of ideas” again.

If all you ever look at is your own work, your emails, and the same three apps, then of course, you’re going to feel stuck. Creativity needs two things: fresh input and a bit of space to join the dots.

A few low-effort habits that actually help:

  • Mix up your inputs: read things that have nothing to do with your job, go to a gallery, watch a random talk on a topic you know nothing about.
  • Make a daily “scrapbook”: save 3–5 things that caught your eye (screenshots, links, quotes) and add one line on why you like them.
  • Play with constraints: design in black and white only, write everything in one paragraph, use a single typeface for a whole day, and see what happens.
  • Protect “bored” time: go for a walk without headphones, doodle in a notebook, stare out the window, and let your mind wander.
  • Share messy work: post work‑in‑progress in creative communities instead of hiding everything until it’s “perfect”.

A nice rhythm to aim for: one day to collect inspiration, one day to remix it (moodboards, sketches), one day to ship something small.

When you’re working on a brand, a campaign, or just trying to level up your general “taste”, these are brilliant to have in your back pocket:

  • Mindsparkle Mag – Polished branding, web, and motion projects. Very good reference if you’re going for premium, high‑end vibes.
  • The Brand Identity – Deep dives into brand systems, grids, typography, and full identities for bigger brands.
  • Rebrand – Before/after identity projects. Great to show stakeholders what’s possible when a brand actually commits to change.
  • Visuelle – Contemporary, often minimalist graphic design and identity work, with a strong editorial feel.
  • Design Everywhere – A mix of work from different design disciplines all in one place, handy when you want to cross‑pollinate ideas.
  • Designspiration – A visual search engine for design. Fantastic for moodboards, colour ideas, and exploring a particular aesthetic.

A nice way to use these: pull together 15–20 images around a rough direction (say, “soft pastels” or “bold type on dark backgrounds”), then narrow it down to 6–8 that really nail the mood. That becomes your visual North Star for the project.

You don’t have to build in a vacuum. Hanging out (even quietly) in creative communities keeps you honest, inspired, and a bit braver with your work.

A few worth exploring:

  • Behance & Dribbble communities – Beyond browsing, follow designers you genuinely like, leave thoughtful comments, and pay attention to how they explain their process.
  • Ladies, Wine & Design – A global network with local chapters for women and non‑binary creatives: talks, portfolio nights, casual meetups.
  • The Design Kids – Focused on students and emerging designers, with events and resources to help you get into the industry.
  • The Studio by Creative Boom – A calmer, more curated space for designers, illustrators, and writers who don’t love the chaos of big social platforms.
  • Reddit / Discord spaces (like r/graphic_design) – Good for honest feedback, resource sharing, and seeing how different people tackle similar briefs.
  • Mastodon creative instances – Smaller, slower, more niche communities where you can share work without wrestling an algorithm.
  • Creative Lunch Club – A place to connect with other creatives over your lunch break.

If posting your own stuff makes you cringe, start by giving feedback to others. It’s an easy way to join in, sharpen your eye, and build relationships without yelling, “Look at my work!”

Collecting inspiration is fun. Losing it across 97 tabs, 12 screenshots, and three devices is… less fun. The trick is a light‑touch system you’ll actually keep up with.

Tools that make life easier:

  • Pinterest – Perfect for quick, visual boards on literally anything: interfaces, interiors, packaging, and illustration styles.
  • Eagle – A desktop app for saving and tagging screenshots, assets, and references. Everything lives in one place, and you can search visually.
  • Mymind, Savee, Frameset – A mix of bookmarking, tagging, and smart search that helps resurface good stuff when you need it, not just when you first save it.
  • Same Energy – A visual search engine that finds images with a similar vibe. Ideal when you’ve got one strong reference and want to build a fuller moodboard around it.

A simple workflow you can steal:

  • As you browse, dump anything interesting into your chosen tool. Don’t overthink it.
  • Add a couple of loose tags as you go (things like “type”, “hero”, “soft colour”, “brutalism”, “editorial”).
  • When a new project lands, make a fresh board and pull in the strongest references, so you’re never starting from a truly blank page.

Staying creative isn’t about being permanently “inspired”; it’s about building tiny habits and systems that make inspiration more likely to show up. Give yourself new inputs, a bit of mental breathing room, a place to stash good ideas, time to play, and a few friendly corners of the internet where you can share what you’re working on.

If you enjoyed this blog and wanted to chat more about design and social, then why not give us a bell! We’re always happy to talk more!

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