Pluto Style Illustrations
Pluto illustrations bring friendly astronauts and doodled interfaces into your UI. Use them to lighten onboarding flows and explain complex tech with a playful cosmic twist.
What is Pluto Style?
What makes Pluto stand out are blob-like planets and wobbly line work around interface elements. Pastel cosmic purples and mint gradients sit on clean backgrounds and keep everything light.
UI designers reach for Pluto when onboarding screens and dashboards need a playful tone. Content teams use these spacey scenes for education platforms, social posts and presentations aimed at younger or curious audiences.
For playful apps and brands
Themes in Pluto
What Pluto artists draw
Space missions with astronauts and rockets show up often. You also get dashboard widgets and abstract data constellations. Browse tags to jump straight into subjects that match your project.
Narrowing down your cosmic vibe
Comparing styles helps you decide how friendly or serious your cosmic story should feel across product screens.
Cartoony feels more grounded with everyday scenes and fewer space motifs, while Pluto leans hard into astronauts and floating interface windows.
Ginger Cat focuses on feline mascots and domestic humor. Pluto instead uses astronauts and space tech to explain digital products.
Goose delivers absurd bird situations with strong character gags. Pluto keeps humor gentler and ties scenes closely to app interfaces.
Journal looks like pen sketches on paper with muted tones. Pluto replaces that notebook feel with neon space palettes and bubbly shapes.
Kiddo leans into children’s activities and toys. Pluto targets slightly older audiences who enjoy playful space metaphors for technology.
Mochi characters are round and candy-like with minimal context. Pluto surrounds its figures with planets and UI panels to support product storytelling.
Purr revolves around stylized cats in cozy environments. Pluto swaps domestic scenes for cosmic backdrops and digital dashboards.
Crayon mimics waxy strokes and classroom drawings. Pluto keeps lines cleaner and focuses on tech oriented space adventures.
Karlsson has a retro cartoon mood and busier scenes. Pluto stays lighter with airy compositions and simple interface metaphors.
Blink uses bold colors and sharper geometry for dynamic motion. Pluto prefers soft shapes and slower, contemplative space scenes.
Bonny features rounded business characters in office settings. Pluto shifts those workflows into orbit with planets and abstract data nebulas.
Eyeful aims at editorial storytelling with detailed compositions. Pluto is simpler, with clear icons of rockets and screens for quick scanning.
Frequently asked questions
Start using Pluto illustrations today
Grab a few Pluto scenes, drop them into Figma or the Pichon app, then tweak colors in SVG or Mega Creator. Ship friendlier onboarding, feature pages and slide decks without booking an illustrator.