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The Top 10 Creative WordPress Themes with Real Personality

Some WordPress themes are built for legibility. These are built for expression. 

Whether you’re an artist, maker, or creative business owner, the right theme doesn’t just display your work — it is part of your work.

Here are 10 creative WordPress themes for making a real visual impression.

How I tested these WordPress themes

Whenever I evaluate a theme, I always try it out on my WordPress staging site first.

For each theme, I customized the homepage layout (changing sections, images, and text), explored the templates and patterns libraries (pre-built page layouts and design blocks), and tested any built-in features and unique design elements. I then ran a few blog posts through each theme to see how they handled content.

My goal was to choose themes that make it easier for your website to feel uniquely yours:

  1. Sankofa: Best for cultural organizations, museums, and archives
  2. Memphoria: Best for fashion and design bloggers
  3. Miko: Best for personal portfolios 
  4. Kawaii-Chan: Best for beauty and style influencers 
  5. Feelin’Good: Best for nostalgic creators and bloggers 
  6. Roblog: Best for gamers and streamers 
  7. Parr: Best for artists, gallerists, and visual portfolios
  8. Punk: Best for musicians and bands 
  9. Psychedeli: Best for groovy bloggers 
  10. The Jazzers: Best for music bloggers 

Let’s look at each of them in detail:

1. Sankofa: Best for cultural organizations, museums, and archives

Sankofa Theme Homepage
  • Setup: Intermediate/advanced
  • Who should use it: Museums, cultural organizations, archives, and institutions that publish rich editorial or historical content

Sankofa is a robust theme that draws on Afrofuturist design, with bold colors, original geometries, fractal patterns, and expressive fonts. 

The standout features are its angular image shapes, which appear across page templates, and its customizable About pattern. 

For best results, add your images at the block or archive level rather than replacing them one by one — this ensures the angular shapes display correctly across your site.

Sankofa Theme

Sankofa includes seven unique page templates and two theme-specific patterns, including an organization manifest, which is especially useful if you want to include a company page.

Sankofa Theme Page Template

The verdict 

With some customization, Sankofa offers all the tools you need to build a robust, visually striking website. To get the most out of this theme, you need to be comfortable with patterns, loops, and parent block functions. A word of caution: If you’re new to WordPress, this theme has a steeper learning curve than others.

2. Memphoria: Best for fashion and design bloggers

Memphoria Theme Homepage
  • Setup: Beginner
  • Who should use it: Bloggers who want to show a lot of personality with a wild edge

Memphoria offers a quirky blog layout, with a feed that stacks posts like a layered collection of Polaroids. Together with its six candy-colored theme options, this WordPress theme has a wild, maximalist feel that’s hard to replicate. 

It comes with six-page templates and custom styling options for the feed, tags, and separators. 

I particularly liked the kooky separator options: wavy, dots, zig-zag, and wiggly, which add a playful vibe.

Memphoria Blog Post Design

The verdict 

Memphoria’s Polaroid-style homepage and additional page templates make it easy to build a distinctive, personality-driven blog with minimal setup. 

However, that strong aesthetic means this theme offers limited customization for websites that require greater design flexibility.

3. Miko: Best for personal portfolios

Miko Theme Homepage
  • Setup: Intermediate
  • Who should use it: Personal websites, writers, and other non-visual portfolios

Miko offers a split-page site design with a bold color palette and an unconventional approach to navigation — instead of a traditional header, the sticky panel on the right side of the screen keeps your primary photo and title visible on every page.

This layout is great for personal websites and portfolios centered on one strong image because it keeps your brand closely anchored to your content on the left.

Miko Blog Layout

The verdict 

Miko is a good option if you need a personal site with just a single strong image, such as a headshot or brand photo. It’s a great fit for resumes, project links, or writing samples. 

4. Kawaii-Chan: Best for beauty and style influencers

Kawaii-Chan Theme Design
  • Setup: Beginner
  • Who should use it: Influencers, creators, and bloggers

Kawaii-Chan lives up to its name and inspiration: lively, sweet, and available in multiple pastel colors. 

The rounded headers and footers and bubble-style image frames create a cozy and playful atmosphere, and the built-in kawaii background pattern immediately sets the tone for the site’s aesthetic.

Kawaii-Chan Archive

The verdict 

Kawaii-Chan is a fun theme if you want your lifestyle blog to express a cartoonish, childlike charm. 

If you feel the background pattern is a little too much, you can easily swap it out under Theme Design Background — a handy option if you want a cleaner look while keeping the kawaii aesthetic.

5. Feelin’Good: Best for nostalgic creators and bloggers

Feelin’Good Theme Design
  • Setup: Beginner/intermediate
  • Who should use it: Creators looking for a theme with a nostalgic, retro internet aesthetic

Feelin’Good opens to a colorful homepage image with a semitransparent blog feed. The default look is pure vaporwave, but you can easily swap the site imagery to create different moods.

The header lets you add a logo or a headshot to the right corner, while the footer includes a finger icon that fits the retro style.

Feelin’Good Footer

The verdict 

If you want to add ’80s or ’90s stylings to your site, this theme works perfectly. You can also tailor the visual style with a different background image or color scheme. 

6. Roblog: Best for gamers and streamers 

Roblog Theme Design
  • Setup: Beginner
  • Who should use it: Gamers, streamers, and playful bloggers

Roblog is a nod to the iconic Roblox platform, featuring rounded block styling and a “Playful” logo style that tilts your icon in a mischievous reference to Roblox’s own branding.

Roblog Site Logo Settings

It’s the only theme on this list with a two-column post layout. The sidebar gives you space for an About section, related categories, and a subscription block — making it easy to build your email list right alongside your content.

Roblog Layout

The verdict 

Roblog is a fun theme with useful functionality, such as sidebar subscriptions. The two-column layout is also a big advantage for blogging, but it might feel limiting if you plan to feature other types of content.

7. Parr: Best for artists, gallerists, and visual portfolios 

Parr Theme Homepage
  • Setup: Beginner
  • Who should use it: Photographers, artists, or anyone needing an image-driven website

Parr is a curatorial theme that puts bold imagery front and center. The sideways text elements free up visual space, while the individual blog pages resemble spreads from an art magazine.

The “previous” and “next” buttons on each edge create the feel of turning the page.

Parr Navigation Buttons

Parr’s layout doesn’t offer any variation, but you can still modify the fonts and colors to create your own distinct look.

The verdict 

If you’ve got a visual site and want your images to shine, Parr is the perfect backdrop. It’s a great option for portfolios and photo journals.

You can play around with the theme’s style options to match your brand, but make sure that Parr’s bold, defined layout is a good fit for your vision.

8. Punk: Best for musicians and bands 

Punk Theme Homepage
  • Setup: Intermediate
  • Who should use it: Alternative music bloggers, bands, and musicians

Punk leans hard into the zine aesthetic and commits to it fully. The halftone effect automatically converts your images into one of six two-tone color schemes for a raw, DIY feel. 

Punk Theme Layout

It’s one of the most customization-rich themes on this list. Beyond the homepage, individual posts and pages keep the aesthetic alive with doodles and other lo-fi design elements. 

Punk Theme Footer

The verdict: 

If you like the punk or zine aesthetic, this theme delivers a ton of character throughout your site from the start. 

However, if you have lots of content and site imagery, prepare yourself to spend some time making sure everything looks good in halftone.

9. Psychedeli: Best for groovy bloggers

Psychedeli Theme Design
  • Setup: Beginner
  • Who should use it: Bloggers who love a psychedelic, counterculture feel

Psychedeli channels the ’60s with neon tones, exaggerated fonts, and psychedelic patterns. 

The style variations are more than just color palette tweaks. The backgrounds and fonts also change, so each variation feels like its own distinct site.

Psychedeli Style Variations

Like Punk, Psychedeli automatically adjusts your images to match the theme’s color palette for a cohesive site-wide look. 

Psychedeli Theme Layout

The verdict 

Psychedeli is a bold, vibrant theme that plays nicely with your blog content right out of the box. The color effects are part of the style. However, if you have high-quality images and want to preserve their original style, this might not be the right fit.

10. The Jazzers: Best for music bloggers

The Jazzers Theme Design
  • Setup: Intermediate
  • Who should use it: Music bloggers and reviewers

The Jazzers theme aims to recreate the feeling of browsing through a vinyl collection. 

The large-scale title text and background images evoke classic album sleeves — a perfect aesthetic for music lovers.

The Jazzers Layout Example

This theme makes it easy to curate an attractive blog feed and has enough character for a vibrant music blog. 

The verdict 

If you want your pages to feel like a much-loved vinyl collection, this theme is right up your alley. It does take work to manage the visual tweaks and lengthy titles, though, so make sure you’re willing to put in the effort every time you post.

Build something great with WordPress.com

I’ve given you my take on the top 10 creative WordPress themes, but you know your work better than any list does. The right theme will click the moment you see it.

The best way to find the right fit is to build a site on WordPress.com and explore the options for yourself. 

If you already have a vision, get a custom look fast with our AI website builder. Just describe the look and feel you want with a text prompt and launch your site with managed WordPress hosting.

Ready to find the right look for your website? 

Give Friends Free Access with Complimentary Subscriptions

If you run a paid newsletter on WordPress.com, you’ve probably wanted to give someone free access to your paid content. A friend who supports your work. A fellow writer you admire. Your mom.

Now you can. Jetpack Newsletter offers complimentary subscriptions that let you give any subscriber free access to your paid plans, right from your subscriber list.

How it works

From your site’s dashboard, navigate to Jetpack → Subscribers. Find the subscriber you want to comp, click the three dots (⋮) next to their name, and select “Comp a subscription.”

Select the newsletter plan you want to give them access to and click Confirm. 

They’ll get an email letting them know they have access to your paid content, and their subscription type changes to “Comp” on your Subscribers page.

You can also comp from the subscriber detail view: click on a subscriber’s name to open their profile, then click “Comp a subscription.”

You can comp free subscribers, email-only subscribers, and even people who aren’t currently subscribed (they’re added as a subscriber automatically). You can also remove a complimentary subscription anytime, and the subscriber reverts to free.

Reward your most important subscribers with free access

Once you have a paid newsletter, you’ll find plenty of reasons to comp people:

  • Family and friends you’d never charge
  • Fellow writers for cross-promotion
  • Contest winners and giveaway recipients
  • VIP readers you want to reward for loyalty
  • Sources and collaborators who contribute to your work

If you’ve migrated from another platform, you can use complimentary subscriptions to give your VIPs paid access right away.

Running a paid newsletter on WordPress.com

Complimentary subscriptions are one piece of the Jetpack Newsletter toolkit that keeps getting better. If you haven’t explored paid subscriptions yet, here’s what you can do right now on WordPress.com:

  • Create a paid newsletter on any WordPress.com plan, including free.
  • Set your own monthly and yearly pricing.
  • Collect payments through Stripe with creator-first pricing that doesn’t take a cut of your revenue.
  • Manage subscribers, track email performance, and organize content with newsletter categories.
  • Own your content and subscriber list. Export everything, anytime.

Keep more of what you earn

If you’re comparing paid newsletter platforms, pricing matters. WordPress.com takes 0-10% of your subscriber revenue based on your plan. Substack always takes 10%. That really adds up.

With 100 paid subscribers paying $10 per month, Substack’s cut is $100/month. With 1,000 subscribers, it’s $1,000/month. At 10,000, you’re handing Substack $10,000 every month.

On WordPress.com, your cost stays the same no matter how many subscribers you have.

The more you grow, the more you save. With 1,000 paid subscribers, you save $955 every month on WordPress.com. That’s the difference between a platform that scales with you and one that scales against you.

Get started

If you already have a paid newsletter on WordPress.com, complimentary subscriptions are available now in your Jetpack Newsletter subscriber list. No extra setup is needed.

If you’re on Substack or another platform and ready to make the switch, importing your newsletter takes just a few minutes. Bring your posts, your subscribers, and your paid plans with you.

Ready to try it? Head to your Jetpack Subscribers page to get started.

How WordPress 7.0 Is Building the Foundation for AI-Powered Sites

Until now, every WordPress plugin that integrated AI had to build its own foundations. 

The upcoming WordPress 7.0 changes this by introducing a shared infrastructure that supports how AI works across sites.

AI tools can now discover what a site can do, access AI services through a consistent layer, and trigger actions across plugins without requiring custom integration code for every combination.

The Abilities API: Defining what a site can do

WordPress 6.9 introduced the Abilities API as one of the first foundational pieces of this infrastructure. It gives plugins a standard way to register their capabilities in one place.

Instead of each plugin building its own custom integration, it declares what it exposes: 

  • Specific actions
  • The inputs those actions need
  • What they return
  • Which permissions are required

Those capabilities become discoverable through REST endpoints or the Model Context Protocol (MCP) Adapter.

This means automation tools and AI assistants can interact with WordPress without needing custom code for every plugin. A tool such as Zapier or an AI assistant such as Claude reads what’s available and acts on it.

A practical example: WooCommerce can register capabilities such as updating stock status, retrieving order data, or modifying product attributes. An AI assistant connecting to that site discovers those capabilities automatically. It doesn’t need a bespoke WooCommerce integration — it works with what the plugin has declared.

The WordPress AI Client: One connection to AI models

Before the WordPress AI Client, every plugin that wanted to use AI handled its own integration. Authentication, request formatting, response parsing — all built from scratch, again and again.

The AI Client introduces a shared interface for interacting with AI models. Plugins send prompts through one consistent layer, regardless of the provider.

WordPress 7.0 introduces the Connectors API alongside it. This is a system for managing connections to external services. It also adds a Connectors screen where site owners can configure AI providers in one place. Once configured, those connections are available across plugins without needing additional setup.

Screenshot of the WordPress 7.0 AI Connectors page.

This makes AI interactions composable across plugins. 

A workflow can span multiple tools, such as retrieving WooCommerce product data and passing it through an AI model to generate descriptions, without custom glue code holding it together. 

For developers, this means no more rebuilding the same integrations. For site owners, it means configuring AI once and using it everywhere.

The MCP Adapter: Connecting to external AI tools

MCP is an open standard for how AI assistants communicate with external tools. The WordPress MCP Adapter implements that protocol for WordPress, exposing registered abilities as tools that any MCP-compatible client can discover and call.

The adapter ships separately from WordPress core and was available prior to 7.0, but it becomes significantly more useful with the new AI infrastructure in place. 

Once connected, tools such as Claude, ChatGPT, or Gemini can see what your site can do and trigger actions directly.

This opens up workflows that would have required significant manual work or custom scripting before, such as having to:

  • Batch-update hundreds of posts with a single natural language command.
  • Find all WooCommerce products with inconsistent attributes and standardize them at scale.
  • Query order data to identify top-performing products or spot return trends.

How the pieces fit together

Each component handles a different part of the problem. The Abilities API defines what actions a site can perform. The AI Client connects plugins to AI models. The MCP Adapter exposes those actions to external AI assistants.

Here’s what it might look like in a real workflow:

  1. An AI assistant retrieves posts from WordPress.
  2. An AI model analyzes the content.
  3. The assistant triggers an ability to update the metadata.

Each step uses shared infrastructure. This makes these workflows reusable and composable across the ecosystem rather than locked inside a single plugin.

How this works on WordPress.com

On WordPress.com, this infrastructure is already in place.

Site owners can use the AI Assistant directly in the editor and Media Library to create and rewrite content, adjust layouts, generate images, and more. You can also connect the WordPress site to Claude to analyze content, identify gaps, generate ideas, and push updates back to your site.

Screenshot of the WordPress AI Assistant

For development, WordPress Studio provides a local environment where you can use tools such as Claude Code to build and test plugins, themes, and custom functionality. Telex extends this further, letting you generate blocks and themes from prompts and add them to your site.

Screenshot of the WordPress AI Website Builder.

The bottom line

The AI infrastructure in WordPress 7.0 is making AI-powered plugins and workflows possible at scale.

The Abilities API and AI Client are at the core of that shift — a shared infrastructure that gives the entire ecosystem something consistent to build on. 

Together, they represent a meaningful step toward creating a world where WordPress doesn’t just support AI workflows but actively enables them.

New in WordPress Studio: Studio CLI on npm & phpMyAdmin Access

We recently shipped two big updates for our local development tool, WordPress Studio:

  1. Studio CLI as a standalone npm module
  2. phpMyAdmin access

One is for the terminal devotee, the other is for anyone who dreads opening a separate database tool — both are for anyone who’d rather just get building.

Studio CLI on npm

Until now, using Studio meant needing to download the desktop app. That changes today.

If you work primarily in the terminal — whether you’re a Linux user or just prefer to keep your hands on the keyboard — you can now install Studio directly via npm and skip the GUI entirely.

The CLI fits naturally in automated test runs, deployment scripts, and AI coding agent workflows — anywhere you’re already working in the terminal and spinning up a WordPress site by hand would slow you down.

How to install

If you already have the Studio desktop app installed, the CLI is already available — just enable Studio CLI for terminal under Preferences. 

The WordPress Studio Settings window showing the Studio CLI for terminal toggle, appearance settings, and more
Did you notice dark mode? That’s new, too. Head to your Preferences to change your app’s appearance.

If you want to install the CLI as a standalone tool, simply run npm install -g wp-studio. Alternatively, if you just want to run it once without installing the command, run npx wp-studio.

From there, you can authenticate with WordPress.com, create and manage local sites, preview in the browser, and run WP-CLI commands. Sync with WordPress.com and Pressable, import, export, and more are on the way.

The CLI and the desktop app are companions, not competitors: you can switch between them freely and they stay in sync. And don’t worry: the desktop app isn’t going anywhere.

phpMyAdmin access

On the desktop side, Studio now includes phpMyAdmin access directly from the Overview tab, giving you a visual interface to manage your site’s database. 

Inspecting or editing your local database used to mean reaching for a separate tool and going through a setup you’d rather not bother with. Now you can start querying tables, checking data, and debugging schema issues in just one click.

An orange arrow pointing to the phpMyAdmin button in the WordPress Studio Open in... menu

More ways to build locally

These two updates push Studio further in the same direction: less friction between
you and building on WordPress. 

The CLI removes the GUI as a requirement, and phpMyAdmin removes the need to leave the app when you need to get into your database.

If you haven’t tried WordPress Studio yet, this is a good time to start.

Questions or feedback? We’re in GitHub — open an issue to share feedback, bugs, and feature requests.

Plugins, Global Styles, and More: Now on Every WordPress.com Paid Plan

Whatever you’re building on WordPress.com — a blog, a business site, a portfolio, a store — you have everything you need to create exactly what you want. From day one.

Plugins are now available on all paid WordPress.com plans, starting with Personal. And that’s just the start.

Everything that’s now included

From now on, users on each paid WordPress.com plan can explore:

  • Plugins: Access 50,000+ plugins from the WordPress Plugin Directory and extend your site with new features whenever you need them.
  • Global Styles: Control your site’s fonts, colors, spacing, and visual design across every page at once. 
  • Font uploads: Upload your own fonts, including Google Fonts, and make your site look exactly the way you want it to.
  • Custom CSS: Write your own CSS and customize your site at the code level.

Together, these tools give you professional-grade design control and the full power of the WordPress ecosystem.

What this unlocks for WordPress.com users

Site owners can now build and fully customize their sites from day one. Whatever functionality you might need to achieve your goals, you’ll find it built in.

First, make your site look and feel more like your brand. Control fonts, spacing, and layout across the whole site, or go deeper with CSS if you need something specific.

Then, start attracting more visitors and leads with plugins that add forms, bookings, and pop-ups, improve SEO, deepen analytics, and integrate with other tools.

Screenshot of the WordPress plugins directory.

From here, keep adding new features as you grow.

Existing customers are already in

If you’re on a current paid WordPress.com plan, there’s nothing to activate or upgrade. These features are already available on your account. 

Head to the Plugins section of your dashboard and start exploring.

Already on Business or Commerce plans? You keep getting more value

You’ve always had access to the full stack — and that hasn’t changed. Business and Commerce plans include everything offered in Personal and Premium while still giving you more control, performance, and scale.

Here’s what sets your plan apart:

  • Advanced SEO tools: Go beyond basic plugins with built-in SEO features and deeper insights.
  • Free priority 24/7 support: Talk to a WordPress expert right away when something breaks, or you need advice.
  • Staging and developer tools: Test changes before going live and manage your site directly with SFTP/SSH, WP-CLI, and GitHub.
  • Eight times more storage and VideoPress: Host large media libraries and video without worrying about limits.
  • Automated backups and uptime monitoring: Feel secure with built-in fallbacks that include daily backups, one-click restores, and continuous monitoring.

The Commerce plan also gives you more control over your store, with 0% transaction fees on standard payments and advanced e-commerce features fully baked in, so you don’t overpay for them.

The bottom line: The platform just got more inclusive. Your plan is still the most powerful one we offer.

Choose your path to growth with WordPress.com

You now have real design control, the full plugin ecosystem, and the flexibility to keep adding features as your site grows. 

Whether you’re just starting out or overhauling your site, everything you need is already there.