ART CREATIVE SUPERTHEME — streaming visual package
Year — 2023
Company — StreamElements
Category — Illustration / Streaming Graphics
Medium — Storyboard Illustration & Stream Package Design
Tools — Procreate, Adobe Photoshop
Description —
Visual concept developed for an Art Creative SuperTheme, a complete streaming package designed to be offered as part of the platform’s creator tools.
In the streaming ecosystem, a SuperTheme is a coordinated set of visual assets—such as overlays, alerts, panels, and interface graphics—that allows streamers to build a cohesive visual identity for their channel.
This concept was created specifically for creators who stream their artistic process, a popular category on Twitch. The visuals were inspired by sketchbooks, loose lines, and the spontaneous energy of creative workspaces. The exploration was developed as a storyboard-style proposal to guide potential animation, with GIF previews illustrating how the theme could behave in motion.
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After an accumulative 9 hours (or more, I have a horrible sense of time) I have made an entire PNGtuber+ Model with expressions AND animations. I'm so proud of myself <3
(I also wanna mention the little chatbox appearing at the top; that's my first time properly looking into CSS! I made that ox 😁)
My take on the Twitch "brand guidelines" situation, which I've been believing more and more over the last 24 hours:
StreamElements is a popular site that hooks in to the Twitch API and lets you create custom alerts (those fancy animated graphics that pop up on stream) for when people subscribe/cheer/follow/donate. Tons of streamers use them! I use them!
Very recently, like within the last three months, StreamElements has launched a new Sponsorship tab. If you use StreamElements, it's impossible to miss, because they've been sending me 7-10 emails a week about each new sponsor offer I have.
Generally they'll tell me how I could make "up to $900" by doing a sponsored stream with a list of requirements and goals I'd have to meet in order to earn my payout. There's a lot more to it than that, but we'll get to it.
The thing is, this StreamElements Sponsor system is an almost direct clone of a system Twitch already has: the Twitch Bounty Board. But there's a twist: The Twitch Bounty Board is only available to the upper-crust of streamers who hit consistent and moderately good viewership numbers. And the higher numbers you pull in, the bigger bounties you get with bigger payouts.
StreamElements Sponsorships aren't anywhere near as high profile. A Bounty might have a streamer order food from Dominos, comp them the price of the meal, and have them eat and talk about it on camera. A typical StreamElements Sponsor is a gacha mobile game you probably haven't even heard of.
And that "up to $900" claim on StreamElements is just the hook. Once you actually read the terms, you'll learn that the minimum payout is $15, with $900 being the maximum possible earnings. And usually, just to earn that measly $15 minimum, you have to stream for multiple hours, across multiple days, with special overlays, a special chat bot, while also requiring several viewers to use your offer code and also play for multiple hours.
It creates a discrepancy where Twitch Bounties have a higher barrier of entry but a much higher success rate, and the StreamElements sponsors have a much lower barrier of entry and probably a much smaller trickle of money.
The thing is? Twitch likely gets a cut of the bounty payout, but StreamElements doesn't have to pay Twitch anything for a sponsor. And even if the StreamElements sponsor program has lower payouts and more difficult/nebulous requirements, slots still fill up quickly. That's a lot of money changing hands on Twitch that is not necessarily feeding back in to Twitch itself. And it is through a system seemingly designed to devalue something Twitch is already doing.
Twitch slapping down all these rules about "burned-in advertising" were undoubtedly about pulling people out of StreamElements. After all, the new guidelines said it was fine to link things around the video, like in the description/bio below the stream. Since Twitch literally owns the website, in theory it probably wouldn't have been too hard for them to reskin a streamer's entire page for a bounty integration. There are already plugins and things to generate widgets that aren't burned in to the video and hover over the player's HTML.
It's not hard to imagine a scenario where you accept a Twitch bounty for Mountain Dew and it adds a special Mountain Dew Widget over your stream that's part of the video player code itself, something StreamElements would probably never be allowed to do.
Further evidence for this comes from the fact that, just a few weeks ago, Twitch added a feature to let you generate stream alerts from the Twitch dashboard itself. StreamElements literally started their entire business on robust and highly customizable stream alerts, and once StreamElements started pushing their own bounty board clone with Sponsorships, suddenly Twitch starts testing its own in-house alerts generator.
Twitch was obviously trying to head this off at the pass and provide users as little reason to use StreamElements as humanly possible, but they obviously didn't get there fast enough and were more than a little overzealous.
💜 Hello friends💜
My commissions are officially open! At first I was a little scared of making this official since I just became a full time freelancer haha but I'm sure it will be fun.
You can help me by buying a commission or saving and sharing this post with your family and friends!!!💜
These are the services I offer:
♡Pixel Desk Scenes: 4 Animated Scenes (Starting Soon, BRB, Ending Soon, Offline + 1 Offline static PNG). Design is up to the customer, I request a non-professional sketch with your original design or/and I can help you to decide). Price: $150 USD.
♡Streamer Simple Panels: 10 x Panels with your text of choice in my pixel style (see examples).
Price: $50 USD.
♡Pixel Emotes: 1 static emote for $25 USD. Animations are available for an additional payment of $5 USD.
♡Pixel Badges: Set of 6 badges with the same design $25 USD. Progression sets are for $35 USD.
♡Custom Alerts: 1 GIF Animation ready to use. Price may vary depending on difficulty. Price from $30 USD-$100 USD.
♡Custom Tip Jar: Includes PNG Image(s) with a guide to set up the widget with Streamlabs or StreamElements.
Any other design/asset request please feel free to contact me <3
I'm veeeery excited to start ((((:
Payments form:
-Paypal
-Zelle
For affordable streamer assets you can visit my Etsy shop where I have a variety of pre-made designs with the same high quality of a custom made for HALF PRICE!
New products are posted every week, make sure you favorite the shop <3
Etsy.com/Shop/BananyShop
THIS IS NOT A PHYSICAL ITEM PURCHARSE, BUT A DIGITAL ITEM.
** For Personal Use Only **
You cannot share, edit, re-sell, redistribute these designs or claim design rights to work (:
♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Year — 2021
Company — StreamElements
Client — Papa John's
Category — Advertising / Streaming Graphics
Medium — Branded SuperTheme & Stream Assets
Tools — Adobe Illustrator
Description —
Concept proposal developed for a branded streaming campaign promoting Papa John’s through creator broadcasts.
Similar to other brand collaborations on the platform, the idea was to translate the campaign into a SuperTheme, allowing streamers to visually integrate the brand into their livestream environments through scenes, alerts, and stream graphics.
The visual proposal was created using flat vector illustration with grain textures to match the energetic and playful tone commonly used in streaming campaigns. Although the concept was explored internally, the proposal was not ultimately produced.
Year — 2025
Company — StreamElements
Client — ElRubius
Category — Illustration / Streaming Graphics
Medium — Character Design & Alert Animation Assets
Tools — Adobe Illustrator, Adobe photoshop
Link — https://www.twitch.tv/elrubius
Description —
Illustration and visual concept developed for the stream alerts of ElRubius, one of the most influential Spanish-speaking streamers and content creators in the world, with millions of followers across platforms.
In livestreams, alerts are animated visual notifications that appear on screen when viewers interact with the channel—such as subscribing, donating, or following. These animations are a key part of the streaming experience, helping creators celebrate audience interactions in real time.
The project involved designing the character MadKat, the channel’s mascot inspired by Rubius’ real cat, Wilson. The work includes character development, exploratory sketches, and animated storyboard concepts showing how MadKat would react in different alert scenarios. These animated sketches served as visual guides for the final motion pieces used in the live stream.
Credits —
Illustration & Art Concept — Anye Quintero
Motion & Animation — Juan Manavella, Pilar Meaca