Weekday Style Illustrations
Weekday keeps interfaces honest with monochrome line scenes of real people and objects. Use it when you need clear hierarchy and relatable workplace stories without color competing with content.
What is Weekday Style?
Weekday uses crisp black outlines on white backgrounds with realistic proportions. Characters wear casual clothing and hold everyday devices. Overlapping shapes hint at depth and keep scenes grounded in real environments.
Most commonly used in product onboarding and HR documents, Weekday illustrates typical workdays and home offices. Teams reach for it when text-heavy layouts need human context without bright color.
For everyday product stories
Common Weekday subjects
Scenes focus on office routines and remote work setups. Small leisure breaks with coffee or reading appear often too. Browse tags to jump between people stories and object-focused compositions.
Which monochrome line style fits
Comparing line styles helps you choose the right balance between realism and playfulness for your digital products and printed documents.
Bonbon Line uses sketchy strokes and colored accents. Weekday keeps crisp outlines and solid black fills for serious interfaces.
Company leans toward filled shapes and brand-friendly color blocks, whereas Weekday focuses on linear contours and pure black against white.
Little introduces tiny, simplified characters and gentle color, while Weekday keeps adult proportions and a serious monochrome palette.
Cut relies on flat color blocks and layered paper edges. Weekday relies on outlined forms and overlapping lines without tonal shading.
Whimsy exaggerates poses and proportions for humor, whereas Weekday keeps bodies realistic and gestures subtle for everyday workplace stories.
Amethyst brings rich purple gradients and soft lighting. Weekday drops color entirely and uses line density to suggest emphasis.
Ruby emphasizes bold red hues and dimensional shading instead of the restrained black outlines and flat backgrounds used in Weekday.
Line offers general-purpose outlines with variable color, while Weekday commits to a consistent black and white office-centric world.
Token focuses on tiny icon-scale symbols with fills, whereas Weekday illustrates full scenes with characters and environments.
Teams shows collaborative office stories with soft color fills and rounded shapes. Weekday tells similar stories but relies only on outline and white space.
Pixeltrue icons provide colorful symbols for controls and navigation, while Weekday delivers narrative scenes that explain flows and contexts.
Delesign features flat color characters and modern gradients. Weekday instead uses strict monochrome line art for a more neutral tone.
Frequently asked questions
Start using Weekday illustrations today
Download a few Weekday scenes, drop them into Figma, and test them beside your UI. When they fit, upgrade for SVG files and build a consistent monochrome illustration system for your product.