Email newsletters are an incredibly common way to stay in contact with community members, subscribers, or likeminded groups of people. However, the design of your email newsletter says almost as much about your business, company or group as the text does.
In this post, we’ve gathered up 60+ inspirational email newsletter designs from companies around the world. From 37Signals, Quiznos, FreshBooks, Envato and many others, you’ll find a plethora of inspiration, whether you’re a fan of minimal, artistic, sleek or vector.
Let us know what you think, and share your favorites in the comments! Thanks for reading!
1000 Watt Consulting
Threadless
Authentic Jobs
Nation Toys
Advertisement
Pasta Cup
My Beating Digital Heart
Stampin Up
Envato
Mail Chimp
Sale Away!
Winter Bottom
Envato Mail
Pinkberry
Think!
37 Signals
CabEdge
Juxt
Pulse 8
Nike
45 Royale
EVE Online
Namesco
Dress Up Diana
Remix
Lonely Planet
Next
Animatch
Monsterpreneur
Urban Outfitters
Coach
Batlow Bites
Manual Design
Whiskey Militia
IndieMark
CIB Communications
Bioshock
The 99 Percent
California Walnuts
Quiznos
Freshbooks
Apple
Emag
TypeTec
Raven & Lamb
Filemaker
Blick Studios
Glass House
Art Decor
Arrows and Icons Magazine
Ambiance San Fransico
Fifty Coins
Action Method
Typekit
Heroes Over Europe
Bella Domicile
Percept
Light U
Headscape

























































really inspiring email newsletter designs. thanks for sharing
WOW .These are Great! Really Inspiring!
Truly eye catching which is good marketingwise but I guess the images would be blocked by most emailing clients if my assumption is correct. I don’t know that much about email marketing techniques.
Anyways it would be a shame to block those creative designs.
Thanks for sharing this collection.
Some great email designs, plenty of inspiration!
Most of these designs wouldn’t be effective as emails: image blocking is active for most recipients these days (around 75%), and many of these designs don’t take in to account the “preview pane” (which is that little box in your email software, where most people read email).
A good email design will have a balance of text and images (with text visible “above the fold”).
I disagree there. I think those computer savvy enough to register for email updates from companies know the very simple procedures to take in their email client to download or show the pictures that make up these templates.
As long as an html version is sent to, image emails are so much more creative, inspiring and effective and I think these examples show that, compared to the limitations of designing without them.
Most of these designs wouldn’t be effective as emails: image blocking is active for most recipients these days (around 75%), and many of these designs don’t take in to account the “preview pane” (which is that little box in your email software, where most people read email).
A good email design will have a balance of text and images (with text visible “above the fold”).
One of the nicer collections of e-mail blast inspiration I’ve come across. Thank you for sharing!
Great collection. I do not mind you using the images but can you link back to the site where they came from? http://www.beautiful-email-newsletters.com/
Thanks,
BEN
Thanks Eric, super collection! Loved Pinkberry’s yummy design – it appears to follow the heatmap results in Jacob Nielsen’s Eye-tracking study very closely “F-Shaped Pattern For Reading Web Content”. Guessing this was the intention?