A Behance alternative for finding visual references

Behance is a portfolio network — designers publish projects to be seen and hired. Inspiration by VASA Works is a reference library — work is described and tagged to be found.

On Behance you browse by project and creative field, and the depth of a case study is the point. Here you search by visual attribute — style, color, typography, mood, industry — and get individually described references you can drop onto a Figma canvas as a moodboard or query from an AI assistant.

Behance vs Inspiration by VASA Works, feature by feature

BehanceInspiration by VASA Works
What it isPortfolio network (publish & get hired)Curated reference library (search & reuse direction)
UnitProject / case studySingle described reference
DiscoveryCreative fields, curated galleries, appreciation countsFull-text search + consistent visual vocabulary
DescriptionsAuthor's own project write-upIndependent, structured description per reference
FigmaManualOne-click captioned moodboards
AI toolsHosted MCP
Hiring / communityYes — its core purposeNo — it's a working tool, not a network

Who should still use Behance

To publish your own work, follow specific designers, read full case studies, or hire, Behance is the right place — none of that is what this library does. Use this library when you're mid-project and need precise visual references fast, not a portfolio to browse.

Common questions

What is the difference between Behance and Inspiration by VASA Works?
Behance is a portfolio network where designers publish projects to be seen and hired; Inspiration by VASA Works is a searchable reference library where every piece of work is independently described and tagged by visual attribute — style, color, typography, mood and industry — so it can be found mid-project and turned into a Figma moodboard.
Is Behance good for finding design references?
It can be, but discovery works by project, creative field and popularity rather than by visual attribute. If you know the look you need — say, brutalist typography in a dark editorial layout — a library with consistent tags and full-text search over written descriptions gets you there faster.
When should a designer still use Behance?
For publishing your own portfolio, following specific designers, reading full case studies, or hiring. Those are Behance's core purpose and not something a reference library replaces.
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