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When A Patchwork Of Free Icons Starts Costing More Than A Subscription

Engineers spent hours hunting, cleaning, and resizing icons.

19 de junio 2026 - 07:43

The Point Where “Free” Stops Being Free

Our seed-stage product pulled icons from anywhere a developer could find them: Feather for the dashboard, Heroicons in a few dialogs, a handful from Flaticon and Noun Project, plus a stray SVG someone drew in Figma.

That Frankenstein stack held together until two things happened:

  1. We started building native iOS and Android clients alongside the web app.  
  2. Investors asked for a single polished demo that looked like one product, not three prototypes.

At that point, “free” got expensive. Engineers spent hours hunting, cleaning, and resizing icons. Designers filed bugs about inconsistent strokes and colors. Legal flagged unclear licensing on a couple of marketing pages.

Paying for a single system like Icons8 Icons stopped feeling optional and started looking like a way to contain the chaos.

What Icons8 Icons Actually Gives You

Icons8 Icons is a very large, style-consistent icon library with tooling wrapped around it.

Key aspects that mattered for us:

Plugins cover Figma, Photoshop, Illustrator, Google Docs, and a Mac app (Pichon), so designers and marketers can grab icons without bouncing between tools.

A Thursday Night Before The Series A Rehearsal

On the Thursday before our Series A rehearsal, our mobile lead pinged me: “Settings screens on web and mobile look like different products.” Icon styles drove a big part of that mismatch.

Here’s what I did, end to end:

  1. Pick a base style  

I filtered Icons8 Icons to “iOS 17 Outlined” to match our iOS build and committed to that as the primary system across platforms.

  1. Search and selection  

Using text search plus style filters, I rebuilt the entire settings icon set: security, notifications, billing, team, access logs, API keys. When naming differed, synonyms and categories surfaced the right options.

  1. Quick visual tweaks  

Inside the browser editor, I set a single brand color via HEX, adjusted padding so icons had consistent visual weight, and rotated one or two symbols to match our existing metaphors.

  1. Collections and export  

I dropped everything into a “Settings v2” collection, ran bulk recolor, and exported:

- An SVG sprite for the web app

- Individual SVGs for iOS/Android projects

- A PNG bundle for marketing slides (1600 px for crisp projection)

Total time: under two hours. Previously we had spread that effort across several people over weeks.

At that moment a subscription started beating “free.” Once we valued developer and designer hours lost to hunting icons and fixing inconsistencies, the library and tooling paid for themselves fast.

Two More Real Workflows

1. Marketing Decks And Site Refresh

Our marketing team had been pulling icons from random packs for decks and landing pages. Colors, line weights, and metaphors drifted in every direction.

On a Monday afternoon we:

Result: marketing stopped visiting four different sites for icons and could re-use a coherent set across everything they shipped.

2. Adding Motion To The Onboarding Flow

Later, we wanted small animated icons in our onboarding screens.

The product designer filtered Icons8 Icons by animated type and style, then:

No motion agency, no custom pipeline, no juggling exports from three different tools.

How Icons8 Compares To Other Options

Versus In‑House Icon Sets

In-house icons give real uniqueness, but they demand a steady stream of specialized design time and maintenance. For an early-stage startup, that often means icons lag features by weeks.

Icons8 covers most generic UI and product metaphors across platforms, which makes it a reasonable baseline system. It doesn’t replace a fully custom brand forever, but it buys time before committing design resources to that work.

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