Building a brand usually forces a binary choice: burn budget on a custom illustrator or cobble together a Frankenstein UI from stock assets. The first option eats time and money; the second destroys credibility.
Ouch by Icons8 targets the middle ground. It isn’t merely an image repository. It functions as a system of illustration styles built to cover entire user flows. For product designers and content managers, the question is simple: Can an off-the-shelf library support a coherent brand system, or must you commission custom work to look professional?

The Consistency Problem in UI Design
Most stock illustration sites fail on depth. You find the perfect hero image for a landing page. But try finding a matching graphic for the pricing page, a 404 error screen, or an empty dashboard state. Good luck. You end up mixing line weights, color palettes, and artistic directions.
Ouch fixes this by organizing its library into over 101 distinct styles. These aren’t random collections; they are design systems. Select “Surrealism” or “Simple Line,” and you aren’t getting five images. You access a library with specific assets for logins, checkouts, success states, and fatal errors.
Designers stop hunting for similar images and start selecting correct states from a matching set. With over 28,000 business illustrations and 23,000 technology assets, the coverage for SaaS and corporate projects is dense enough to avoid repetition.
Scenario 1: The SaaS Dashboard Overhaul
Take a product team redesigning a fintech dashboard. They need to soften dry financial data without looking childish.
The lead designer grabs a 3D style from the library. Sourcing 3D assets piecemeal is a nightmare because lighting and texture rendering vary wildly between artists. Sticking to one of Ouch’s 44 available 3D styles ensures the light source and material finish remain consistent across the app.
Next comes the “empty states”-those blank screens with no data to display. The designer downloads FBX files or high-res PNGs. A “No Transactions Found” graphic matches the “Welcome to Your Dashboard” graphic perfectly.
Brand colors matter. Don’t accept the default purple or blue. Map the illustration’s palette to the fintech product’s hex codes using built-in recoloring tools or vector edits (SVG). The result looks like months of custom work, finished in two afternoons.
Scenario 2: The Content Marketing Engine
Marketing teams fight a different battle: speed. A newsletter editor needs fresh visuals daily. Custom illustration creates bottlenecks for a daily LinkedIn post or weekly blog header.
Here, the marketer uses Ouch’s “searchable objects” architecture. Most platforms offer flattened scenes (e.g., “people in a meeting”). Ouch breaks illustrations down into layered vector graphics and tagged objects.
Need a graphic for an article about remote work burnout? Don’t search for that exact phrase and settle for a cliché. Open Mega Creator, the integrated editor. Search for a character from a specific 2D style. Add a “battery low” icon. Place a background element that fits the newsletter aesthetic.
Swap parts. Rearrange elements. You create a semi-custom narrative image. Export the final composition as a PNG. For the newsletter footer, grab some free clipart from the same style family. Visual continuity stays intact without burning premium credits on secondary assets.
A Day in the Workflow: The Developer’s Shortcut
Meet Javi, a frontend developer building a waiting list page for a side project. The code works. The design looks stark and untrustworthy. He isn’t a designer and can’t use Illustrator.
- Selection: Javi opens the Pichon desktop app. It syncs with the Ouch library and floats over his code editor.
- Search: He types “rocket” and filters by “Animated.” He wants motion to grab attention but refuses to write CSS animations from scratch.
- Format Choice: He spots a style he likes. GIFs are heavy. He picks Lottie JSON for crisp scaling on retina screens.
- Implementation: Drag the JSON file directly from the desktop app into the project folder.
- Refinement: The rocket flame is red. His submit button is green. He shifts the palette in the web interface before downloading.
- Deployment: The landing page now features a professional, animated asset. Implementation took under ten minutes.
Comparing Ouch to the Alternatives
Illustration tools generally fall into three buckets:
Freepik / Shutterstock:
The volume heavyweights. You find millions of images aggregated from thousands of contributors. Finding a set of 50 images that look exactly like they came from the same hand is nearly impossible. You trade consistency for quantity.
Undraw / Humaaans:
Open-source libraries work for rapid prototyping. But because they are free and ubiquitous, they suffer from the “template effect.” Using them signals that a site is likely a template or a bootstrap startup. They lack the distinct personality found in Ouch’s more artistic styles like “Surrealism” or “Collage.”
Custom Commission:
Hiring an illustrator guarantees something 100% unique. It also burns the most budget and takes the longest. Ouch acts as a lease on a custom look. You get high quality at a fraction of the cost, accepting the slight risk that another brand might use the same style.
Limitations and When to Avoid Ouch
Ouch isn’t a magic bullet for every scenario.
Merchandise and Print on Demand:
Selling t-shirts or mugs? Careful. Standard licensing covers digital UI and marketing materials. Print-on-demand businesses generally need to contact the team for specific merchandise licensing.
Hyper-Specific Metaphors:
Niche products struggle here. Try finding a pre-made scene for “industrial HVAC repair automation.” You won’t. You will have to rely on combining objects in Mega Creator. Even then, specific machinery might be missing.
Attribution for Free Users:
Free users get PNGs but must link back to Icons8. Professional corporate sites usually can’t afford that visual clutter. Upgrade to the paid plan to remove the credit requirements.
Practical Tips for Best Results
Commit to One Style ID:
Pick a lane. When you find an illustration you like, click the style name (e.g., “Flame” or “Taxi”). Bookmark that specific page. Browsing the general “Business” category for your next asset breaks the illusion of a custom brand artist. Stay within the style ID.
Edit the Vector Sources:
Download the SVG or AE sources if you have a paid plan. Delete a stray background element. Move a character’s arm. That tiny edit separates “stock” from “intentional design.”
Use the Desktop App:
Don’t ignore the Pichon app. For designers in Figma or developers in VS Code, dragging and dropping transparent PNGs without visiting the website saves significant context-switching time.
Check for Animation Parity:
Planning motion? Check if your chosen style supports Lottie or Rive formats early. Not all static styles have animated counterparts. Switching styles mid-project to get motion support is painful.
You don’t always need a custom illustrator to get a custom look. Ouch proves that. By focusing on depth within styles rather than just breadth of topics, teams can finally build systematic visual languages that scale.
