Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design

Dmytro Masalov
by Dmytro Masalov · Jan 2026
shot

Upvote

5
VIDEO

Project description

Celerart delivered a heartwarming brand expansion and custom Webflow website for Luckydog, an award-winning pet care facility in Eugene/Springfield, US. While preserving their iconic existing logo, we expanded the visual identity to be vibrant, modern, and fun, reflecting the high energy and professional care the brand is known for. We replaced a dated legacy site with a high-performance digital presence designed from scratch. The new website features a clean UX/UI, intuitive navigation, and a robust CMS-powered structure to manage their various service pages efficiently. Built in Webflow using the Client-first approach, the site ensures top-tier performance, responsiveness, and a seamless booking experience for pet owners. This project demonstrates how strategic branding and modern no-code development can elevate a community-leading business, aligning its digital presence with its status as an industry award-winner.

VIDEO
Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 1Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 2
VIDEO
VIDEO
Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 5
VIDEO
Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 7Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 8
VIDEO
Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 10Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 11Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 12Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 13Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 14Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 15Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 16
VIDEO
Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 18Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 19Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 20Award-Winning Pet Care Webflow Website Design Image 21

Support this project

Upvote

5
© 2026 Copyright Privacy Policy and Terms of Service