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Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
Sample illustration from the Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection
What’s Included 2 packs
Mini Doodle Illustrations Chapter 2

Mini Doodle Illustrations Chapter 2

Outline
$49
Included

200 playful one-color line illustrations capturing everyday moments, actions, and emotions in a loose doodle style. Hand-drawn vectors designed for adding personality and warmth to websites, apps, and creative projects. Available in Illustrator, SVG, and PNG formats.

200 elements
Mini Doodle Illustrations Chapter 1

Mini Doodle Illustrations Chapter 1

Outline
$56
Included

200 playful hand drawn doodle-style vector illustrations covering people, activities, objects, and everyday moments. Designed with bold sketch lines and clean outlines for websites, apps, presentations, and creative projects. Fully editable vectors in Illustrator, PNG, and SVG formats.

200 elements

Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection — 400 Illustrations

Mini Doodle — 400 Playful Illustrations Across Two Chapters

The Mini Doodle Collection is 400 single-color freehand illustrations built around a precise use case: small inline graphics that carry personality without competing with the surrounding content. Two chapters of 200 illustrations each — Chapter 2 and Chapter 1 — share a consistent visual approach: loose, hand-drawn linework in a single adaptable color, sized and composed to work as supporting elements rather than hero images. The style is casual without being careless, expressive without requiring context to read.

What the Mini Doodle Style Actually Does

The doodle aesthetic occupies a visual territory that most illustration styles leave unaddressed. At one end of the spectrum, flat vector illustration is legible and professional but generic — the standard SaaS visual language that has become background noise. At the other end, character illustration and detailed scene illustration carry enough visual weight that they become the subject of the page rather than a supporting element within it. Between those two poles is the doodle: casual, hand-made, light enough to coexist with dense text or complex layout, distinctive enough to register as an aesthetic choice rather than a default.

Mini Doodle is specifically the small end of that spectrum. The "Mini" in the name is not an afterthought — it describes a compositional philosophy. Each illustration in this collection was drawn to function at small sizes, as an inline element alongside paragraphs, as a marginal annotation, as a callout marker, as a section divider. At those sizes, detailed illustration loses its detail; flat vector loses its personality. Mini Doodle keeps both because the hand-drawn line reads as a craft signal at any scale, and the single-color treatment makes the visual form read clearly without color complexity to parse.

The freehand quality is structural rather than incidental. Lines vary in weight slightly, forms are slightly loose, proportions are deliberately imprecise. These are not errors — they are the visual signals that communicate "made by hand," which is the primary value proposition of the doodle style. A perfectly constructed vector drawing with uniform line weight communicates precision; a Mini Doodle illustration communicates warmth.

Style Philosophy: The Gap Between Approachable and Cute

The Mini Doodle collection was built to address a positioning problem that many brands — particularly B2B-adjacent brands selling to creative or technical audiences — encounter regularly. The problem: they want their visual design to feel approachable, human, and non-corporate. The available options are mostly wrong for this purpose. Flat illustration feels generic and corporate despite its softness. Full character illustration systems feel childlike or cartoonish beyond a certain saturation point. Photography feels too formal. Stock doodle sets feel low-quality.

The Mini Doodle style occupies the gap between approachable and cute. It signals informality without committing to playfulness as a brand value. A landing page that uses Mini Doodle illustrations as section graphic elements reads as warm and made-by-humans without reading as a children's product or a Mailchimp parody. The key is scale: when doodle illustrations are large, they become the visual subject of the page and the style's casualness amplifies. At small sizes — the Mini Doodle scale — the style is present as texture and warmth without dominating.

The single-color treatment is the mechanism that makes this work in professional contexts. Every Mini Doodle illustration is drawn in a single color with no fill — just line, at the weight and looseness of a genuine sketch. That means the entire collection adapts to any brand color system with one hex code change. A brand that uses deep navy as its primary color drops that navy into the Mini Doodle line color and the illustrations become that brand's illustration system. A brand using terracotta does the same. There is no color coordination overhead, no palette-matching across multiple fill zones, no risk that the illustration color system fights the brand color system. One change and the integration is complete.

Where Mini Doodle Illustrations Work

The scale and style of these doodle illustrations make them effective in contexts where larger, more visually prominent illustration would be the wrong choice.

Blog posts and editorial content use Mini Doodle illustrations as section headers, paragraph markers, and inline decorative elements. Long-form content benefits from visual breaks that keep the reader's attention without interrupting the reading flow. A Mini Doodle illustration in the margin of a long article, or as a divider between sections, does this work without asking the reader to stop reading and process an image. The hand-drawn quality also signals that the content is authored — that a human made this page — which is increasingly relevant as readers become more aware of mass-produced content.

Documentation pages and technical writing platforms use Mini Doodle illustrations to humanize content that would otherwise read as purely functional. A note callout with a Mini Doodle icon, a tip marker drawn in the doodle style, a section header with a small inline illustration — these details make documentation feel authored rather than generated. Stripe, Notion, and Linear have all used small illustration elements in their documentation for this reason; Mini Doodle provides that visual vocabulary at a range and scale that works.

Social media graphics for brands and creators who post regularly use Mini Doodle illustrations as background texture, overlay elements, and framing devices. A branded Instagram template that uses Mini Doodle elements as repeating pattern or corner accents has a consistent visual identity that photography or typography alone rarely achieves. At the sizes social media graphics display at, Mini Doodle's legibility at small scale is an advantage over illustration styles that require more visual space to read clearly.

Marketing emails reach for Mini Doodle for their header and footer illustrations, and as decorative elements within the email body. Email template design has strict constraints — narrow widths, varied client rendering, limited space — that favor small, adaptable illustration. Mini Doodle's single-color treatment renders consistently across email clients without the color-rendering variability that multi-fill illustration can produce.

Products that want personality without commitment to a full character system — SaaS tools, developer tools, productivity apps — use Mini Doodle as the personality layer in an otherwise clean interface. A settings page that adds a Mini Doodle element to the empty state, a dashboard that uses a small doodle as the section marker, an onboarding flow that drops in a hand-drawn icon as a progress indicator — these applications work because Mini Doodle adds warmth at a scale that doesn't disrupt the UI's function.

What's Inside

  • 400 total illustrations across two chapters — 200 per chapter
  • Two chapters: Chapter 1 and Chapter 2, each with equal depth and the same visual approach
  • Single-color treatment: every illustration uses one line color, adaptable to any brand palette
  • Freehand sketch style: loose, hand-drawn linework that reads as made-by-hand at any scale
  • Formats included: SVG, PNG (multiple sizes), Adobe Illustrator AI source files
  • Commercial license: one-time purchase, unlimited projects and client work

Pack Overviews

Mini Doodle Illustrations Chapter 2 — 200 Illustrations

The most downloaded chapter in the Mini Doodle collection, with 200 illustrations extending the visual vocabulary established in Chapter 1. Chapter 2 was drawn after the style had a year of use in real projects, which means the subject selection reflects what designers actually reached for in the first chapter and what they found missing. The result is a chapter with more intentional coverage of the recurring design needs in the small-illustration use case: more scene diversity at the scale where Mini Doodle works best, more subject variety for the editorial and documentation contexts where this style performs well, and more compositional range for designers building templates and recurring visual systems. At 200 illustrations, Chapter 2 has enough range that a project which exhausts Chapter 1's direct matches will find what it needs here rather than requiring a different illustration source. The two chapters share the same line weight, the same sketch looseness, the same scale philosophy — they were drawn by the same hand and they look like it.

Mini Doodle Illustrations Chapter 1 — 200 Illustrations

The original Mini Doodle chapter and the foundation of the visual system. These 200 illustrations established the Mini Doodle style parameters: what looseness is appropriate, what scale the illustrations should be composed for, how much subject detail is legible at small sizes before the drawing becomes illegible, what single-color treatment means for this style. Chapter 1 covers the everyday visual vocabulary of small illustration: people in action (individual and paired), objects in context, process metaphors, emotional states, and abstract graphic elements that function as decorative texture. At 200 illustrations, Chapter 1 has significant range for a single-chapter library — most small-illustration use cases will find what they need within it. The reason to buy the full collection rather than starting with Chapter 1 alone is the additional 200 illustrations in Chapter 2, which means a sustained project (a blog that publishes weekly, a documentation site that grows over time, an email newsletter that runs for years) has a library deep enough to avoid visual repetition.

Formats and Ownership

  • SVG: scalable to any dimension, editable in Figma, Sketch, or any vector tool, usable inline in web and email
  • PNG: exported at multiple sizes (512px, 256px, 128px) for raster contexts, email clients, and CMS platforms
  • Adobe Illustrator AI: source files with the line art on editable paths — change the single line color in one step or adjust individual lines
  • Color editing: one fill color per illustration; change it in any vector editor in under thirty seconds
  • License: one-time commercial license, unlimited use across your own projects and client work, no attribution required
  • No subscription: buy once, download from your account and use indefinitely
  • Future packs: additional Mini Doodle packs added to this collection are included for existing collection owners at no extra cost

Collection vs. Individual Packs

Chapter 2 is priced at $49 individually; Chapter 1 is priced at $56. Buying both chapters separately totals $105. The Mini Doodle Collection is $80, saving $25 — roughly 24% off the individual chapter prices.

The 24% saving is the smallest discount in the GetIllustrations collection catalog. The case for buying the collection is partly about the $25 saving and partly about depth. Mini Doodle's most common use cases — blog illustration, documentation graphics, newsletter templates, social media templates — are sustained over time. A blog that publishes twice a week needs more than 200 illustrations to maintain visual variety over a year without repeating. A newsletter that runs for eighteen months needs more than one chapter's worth of doodle elements before readers start recognizing repeating assets.

At 400 total illustrations across two chapters, the collection gives a sustained project enough range to draw from for an extended period without repetition. That depth argument holds most strongly for the use cases where Mini Doodle is most effective: not single-campaign design work, but ongoing visual identity maintenance across content that publishes regularly. Any future Mini Doodle chapters added to the collection are included for existing collection owners at no extra cost.

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Featured collection mark Featured Collection 2 Packs 400+ illustrations

Mini Doodle Illustrations Collection

$80 $105 one time
You save $25 (24%) by buying individually
Illustrator PNG SVG
Collection Summary
Packs included 2
Total illustrations 400
File formats Illustrator, PNG, SVG
Individual price $105
Collection price $80
You save $25 (24%)
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Collection FAQ

What does "single-color" mean for these doodle illustrations, and how do I change the color?
Every Mini Doodle illustration is drawn as a line illustration with no color fills — only the line itself carries color. In the default files, the line is black or near-black. To change it to your brand color in Adobe Illustrator, open the AI file, select all (Cmd/Ctrl+A), and change the stroke or fill color to your hex value. Every line in the illustration updates simultaneously because they all share the same color attribute. In Figma, the SVG file imports as a single vector shape or a small set of paths — select all and override the fill color. The entire process takes under a minute per illustration for a full brand color adaptation. That speed is the structural advantage of the single-color approach over multi-fill illustration.
Are these illustrations optimized for a specific size, or do they scale freely?
Mini Doodle illustrations are specifically optimized for small-to-medium display sizes: roughly 48px to 300px in digital contexts. At those sizes, the hand-drawn line weight reads as intentional and the sketch looseness is legible as craft rather than imprecision. Below 48px, the linework becomes thin and loses its hand-drawn character. Above 300–400px, the looseness of the forms can start to read as roughness rather than style. For hero section use at very large sizes, the Mini Doodle style is less well-suited — a larger illustration style with more visual complexity at scale is a better fit. For inline graphics, template elements, section markers, documentation callouts, and social media decorative use, the 48–300px range is exactly where Mini Doodle performs.
Can I use these doodle illustrations for printed materials?
Yes. The vector formats (SVG and AI) scale to any print size without quality loss. The single-color treatment makes Mini Doodle illustrations particularly well-suited to print contexts with color restrictions — one-color print runs, spot color printing, black-and-white documents. At larger print sizes (above 10cm in a printed layout), the line weights remain visible and the hand-drawn quality reads clearly. For print use, the AI source files give you the most control — you can adjust the stroke weight if the default seems too light for a specific print context, or convert strokes to outlines for guaranteed rendering accuracy across print workflows.
How do the two chapters differ from each other visually?
Both chapters share the same line weight, sketch looseness, and single-color treatment — they look like they come from the same hand, and they were drawn to the same specification. The primary difference is in subject selection. Chapter 2 reflects real-world usage feedback from Chapter 1: the subjects that designers reached for most often informed the selection for Chapter 2, and the gaps designers noticed — subject categories underrepresented in Chapter 1 — were filled in Chapter 2's coverage. The result is two chapters that complement each other in coverage rather than repeating the same subjects in different compositions. Mixing illustrations from both chapters in a single project produces no visual inconsistency.
Do these illustrations work for brands with a formal or professional visual identity?
Yes, in specific applications. The key is scale. Mini Doodle illustrations at small sizes — as section markers, note callouts, or marginal elements — read as warmth and humanity without imposing the doodle style's casualness on the surrounding design. At large sizes, the casual quality dominates and becomes harder to reconcile with a formal visual identity. For professional and enterprise contexts, the recommended approach is to use Mini Doodle at the small-illustration scale where it functions as texture rather than subject, and to use a more formal illustration style for any hero or feature-section application where the illustration carries significant visual weight.
What subjects are covered across the 400 illustrations?
The 400 illustrations span the everyday visual vocabulary of small graphic design: people in motion and at rest (individual and paired), common objects in context, process metaphors (growth, progress, communication, connection), emotional states (celebration, concentration, curiosity, rest), abstract graphic elements that function as decorative texture, and a range of conceptual illustrations for the recurring design needs of blog posts, documentation, and marketing emails. The two chapters together cover enough subject range that most sustained illustration needs — a content site, a newsletter, a documentation platform — can find a Mini Doodle match without having to adapt a non-matching illustration from a different style.

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