Add a festive touch to your designs with the Clay 3D Celebration Icons pack! Featuring vibrant holiday-themed icons with realistic clay textures and handcrafted details, perfect for any celebratory occasion.
Add a festive touch to your designs with the Clay 3D Celebration Icons pack! Featuring vibrant holiday-themed icons with realistic clay textures and handcrafted details, perfect for any celebratory occasion.
This free collection of 3D icons, skillfully crafted in Blender, showcases a delightful clay texture that brings creativity and charm to your projects. Featuring a handcrafted design, these icons offer a playful yet polished aesthetic, making them an excellent choice for enhancing the visual appeal of your entertainment-themed designs without any cost.
High-quality 3D icons, meticulously designed in Blender, features a charming clay texture that adds a touch of creativity and personality to multimedia-themed projects. With their handcrafted appearance, these icons offer a playful yet refined look.
The Clay 3D Hand Gesture Icons Pack is a collection of high-resolution 3D icons designed in Blender. This set brings a fresh and expressive approach to visual communication, featuring a variety of commonly used hand gestures, such as thumbs up, peace sign, praying hands, OK sign, shaka, finger-crossed, and more..
High-resolution illustrated icons crafted in Blender 3D, this pack features a distinctive clay texture applied to every icon, giving them a playful yet professional caricature-like appearance to spice up your Business themed designs.
The Clay 3D Collection brings together 282 3D-rendered icons built around a single, consistent visual approach: soft rounded forms, warm material finishes, and pastel color palettes that stay readable at every size. If you need icons that feel approachable without tipping into cartoonish, this is the set. The packs cover business UI, celebration moments, multimedia controls, hand gestures, and a free 25-icon sampler you can start with before committing to the full library.
Clay-style 3D icons occupy a middle ground that flat icons and sharp-edged 3D renders both miss. Flat icons can feel generic; high-fidelity 3D renders often look too heavy for UI contexts. The clay aesthetic solves both problems.
The defining characteristics here are consistent across all 282 icons: a slight ambient occlusion shadow that gives each object believable depth without a hard drop shadow, rounded bevels on every surface that catch light softly, and a material finish that reads as matte-plastic or silicone rather than glass or metal. That material choice matters for legibility. Glossy 3D objects create harsh specular highlights that compete with the surrounding UI. These icons stay calm.
Color is handled with restraint. Each icon uses a limited palette — typically two or three tones — built around soft pastels with enough saturation to read clearly on both white and dark backgrounds. The result is a set of icons that slot into light-mode SaaS interfaces, dark-mode mobile apps, and pastel-toned marketing pages without requiring color adjustments each time.
All five packs share the same rendering treatment, which means you can pull icons from different packs into a single screen and they look like they belong together. That consistency is the main reason to buy the collection rather than individual packs.
The clay 3d icons style has strong pull in a few specific design contexts.
App onboarding screens are the most common use case. When you're guiding a new user through a setup flow, you want icons that communicate function quickly without adding visual weight. A clay-style lock icon for a security step, a calendar icon for scheduling, a bell for notifications — all of these read immediately at 64px or 128px, and the soft rendering makes the screen feel less intimidating than a page of sharp UI elements.
SaaS pricing and feature tables also benefit from this style. Feature-comparison rows are typically dense with text; small, well-rendered 3D icons break up the visual monotony without requiring the reader to parse complex imagery. The business icon pack in this collection is built specifically for that kind of context — checkmarks, graphs, analytics, dashboards, team collaboration scenes, all rendered in the clay style.
Presentation decks for product demos, investor pitches, and internal strategy documents use these icons as section headers and visual punctuation. At large sizes — 256px and above — the 3D rendering becomes more visible and adds a bit of production value to slide layouts that might otherwise look like a default PowerPoint.
App store screenshots for iOS and Android rely heavily on icons and feature callouts to convert viewers. The clay aesthetic performs well here because it looks premium without looking fabricated. Stock photo assets often read as generic in app store context; these icons read as deliberate.
Landing pages for B2C apps — fintech tools, productivity apps, health trackers — use clay-style icon sets to add visual interest to feature sections without hiring a custom illustrator. A row of six clay 3D icons above a features grid is a common and effective layout pattern, and the pastel palette gives those layouts a cohesion that mixed-source icons rarely achieve.
The free sampler pack gives you 25 icons pulled from across the collection's visual range. It's the fastest way to test the clay 3d icons rendering style in your actual design environment before purchasing. The selection spans several of the themes covered in the paid packs — a few business-type objects, a few multimedia symbols, some gesture-adjacent shapes. Nothing overly specialized, just a useful general survey. If the style works for your project, you have a clear path to the full library.
The largest pack in the collection and the one with the widest application range. These 100 icons cover the objects and concepts that appear most often in SaaS product design: analytics graphs, dashboard elements, document and file types, team collaboration scenes, security locks, notification bells, calendar controls, email symbols, and financial tools. The icons are rendered at a size and level of detail that reads cleanly in UI contexts — feature tables, empty states, onboarding flows, and settings pages. This is the pack most designers reach for first when building out a product interface.
Thirty-five hand and gesture icons rendered in the clay style. The hands have the same soft, rounded quality as the object icons — fingertips are slightly bulbous, the skin tone is a neutral pastel that avoids the uncanny valley of realistic flesh tones. The gesture set covers common interaction metaphors: point, swipe, pinch, thumbs up, thumbs down, wave, open palm, fist, and several others. These icons appear in tutorial overlays, app walkthrough screens, instructional landing pages, and gesture-control documentation. For any product that needs to explain touch interactions, this pack is a practical resource.
Fifty-three icons for celebration, achievement, and event contexts. The set includes trophies, medals, gift boxes, party elements, confetti scenes, balloons, stars, ribbons, and similar objects. In product design, celebration icons appear most often in reward moments: completing onboarding, hitting a goal, upgrading to a paid plan, earning a badge. The clay rendering makes these moments feel warm rather than gamified. Marketing teams use these for campaign visuals, promotional email headers, and landing pages tied to sales events or product milestones.
The multimedia pack covers media player controls, audio and video objects, device types, and content-creation tools — 69 icons in total. Play buttons, pause symbols, sliders, speakers, headphones, cameras, microphones, film reels, and streaming-related objects. This pack has the widest effective size range of the five: multimedia icons often appear at large sizes in hero sections and at small sizes as inline controls. The clay rendering holds up at both ends. Teams building video platforms, podcast apps, streaming services, or any product with media playback reach for this pack regularly.
The four paid packs in this collection — the freebie is $0 regardless — are priced individually: Business Icons at $18, Hand Gesture Icons at $25, Celebration Icons at $19, and Multimedia Icons at $30. Buying all four separately adds up to $92. The collection is $45, which includes all four paid packs plus the free sampler with its additional 25 icons. The saving against individual prices is $47.
There's a second argument beyond the price. Buying packs individually over time as a project needs them means you might end up with two Clay 3D packs alongside a third icon set from a different source. If that third set uses a different rendering approach — slightly different lighting, slightly different bevel treatment — you introduce a subtle visual inconsistency that is hard to correct without going back and replacing assets.
Buying the collection upfront settles the consistency question from day one. Every icon, from every pack, shares the same ambient occlusion treatment, the same bevel radius, the same pastel material palette. You can drop any of the 282 icons onto the same screen and they look like they come from the same hand.