Lukasz Adam: free SVG illustrations (CC0)

Browse Lukasz Adam's free SVG illustration library: CC0-licensed vectors for websites, products, and decks. No attribution required per the site. Preview and download from the official gallery.

What is Lukasz Adam's illustration library?

Lukasz Adam (lukaszadam.com/illustrations) hosts a large collection of free SVG illustrations for commercial and personal projects. The site describes the work as CC0 licensed, with some pages also mentioning an MIT-style note. Read the live license text before you ship. Themes include AI, remote work, cities, devices, characters, and icon sets, with an on-page grid you can browse before download. This Uwarp page embeds the official gallery so you can explore scenes and follow through to files in one flow.

What you get from the library

The set is aimed at marketing and product surfaces that need friendly vector art without a long custom brief.

  1. Broad topic coverage: Find coding, AI, productivity, commerce, travel, and lifestyle scenes alongside smaller icon packs.
  2. SVG-first delivery: Downloads are structured as scalable vectors suitable for the web, slides, and design tools.
  3. No attribution requirement per the site: The author states CC0 and that attribution is not required; still confirm wording for your use case.
  4. Optional support: The site links optional ways to support the author; that is separate from license terms.
  5. Growing catalog: New packs appear over time; use the live site for the full current list beyond what you see in a single visit.

How to use this page

A simple workflow keeps illustration choices aligned with your layout and brand.

  1. Match metaphor to the headline: Pick a scene that reinforces the main message so art and copy read as one story.
  2. Download the SVG you need: Use the official site’s download flow; keep a folder per project with stable filenames.
  3. Pass through your design tokens: Tint or stroke SVGs in Figma or code so the illustration sits with your UI palette.
  4. Re-check license text: CC0 and “no attribution” statements can be updated; skim the current page before client delivery.

Tips for CC0 illustration use

Permissive licenses still pair better with good layout discipline.

  1. Crop for density: Busy scenes can dominate small cards; crop or simplify paths when the layout is tight.
  2. Keep contrast in mind: Flat fills can wash out on tinted panels; test on real backgrounds and in dark mode if you ship it.
  3. One hero illustration is often enough: Stacking multiple full scenes on one view can add noise; let one image carry the fold.

Who this library suits

Teams that need ready-made vector scenes without blocking on custom illustration sprints.

  1. Marketing and landing pages: Heroes, feature bands, and blog headers with consistent flat or outline styles.
  2. Product and SaaS teams: Empty states, onboarding, and help content where a small scene adds clarity.
  3. Studios and freelancers: Fast client work where budget does not cover bespoke illustration for every page.
  4. Side projects and education: Student sites and portfolio pieces that need polished visuals on a short timeline.

Why browse here on Uwarp

A single embed keeps research next to the rest of the tool directory.

  1. Official source in view: The iframe points at the public gallery on lukaszadam.com so you are always seeing the current catalog layout.
  2. Faster compare with other tools: Jump between Uwarp’s illustration and icon entries without leaving the site map.
  3. Clear scope: Uwarp does not re-host files; you download and license from the author’s pages.
  4. Honest license framing: We repeat that you should read the live terms—good practice for any CC0 or public domain claim.

Technical notes

This page embeds the public lukaszadam.com experience. Uwarp does not host the assets.

  1. Embed source: The iframe loads https://lukaszadam.com/illustrations.
  2. Format: The gallery focuses on SVG downloads; availability of individual files follows the main site.
  3. Licensing: The site states CC0 and optional MIT wording on some materials. Verify the text at download time for redistribution and modification.
  4. If the embed fails: Open the same path in a new tab. Ad blockers, script policies, or cookie banners can change iframe behavior.

Frequently Asked Questions

Have questions? We have answers.