Booking page templates
Templates that match your voice
Goldenhour ships four booking-page templates, each tuned to a different brand voice + service type. Pick the one that matches how you want customers to feel when they land: it’s the fastest visual win on the platform.
Minimalist
Cool neutralClean, modern, lots of whitespace. Sans-serif type, restrained accent color. The customer reads it as 'professional, established, no-fuss'.
Best for
- Lash + brow artists with a clinical-clean aesthetic
- Hair colorists who want their work + photos to speak
- Established solo artists who don't need to convince anyone
Editorial
Warm cream + goldSerif headlines, larger photos, magazine-shaped layout. The customer reads it as 'this is luxe, this is intentional, this person has taste'.
Best for
- Bridal-heavy books
- Premium-tier pricing ($90+ standard service)
- Artists with strong photography + a real visual brand
Sunset (default)
Sunset gradientGoldenhour's signature gradient hero. Warm, feminine, beauty-coded. The customer reads it as 'this is on-brand for the spray-tan / wellness moment'.
Best for
- Spray tan + sunless artists
- Wellness + spa-adjacent services
- New artists who want a polished default without overthinking
House-call
Warm earth + signal-blueMobile-artist-first. Pitch + address-input hero + travel-fee transparency above the fold. The customer reads it as 'this person comes to me + the logistics are figured out'.
Best for
- Mobile-only artists
- Hybrid artists where mobile is the dominant flow
- Artists with hotel-delivery / wedding-suite services
Custom accent
Override the accent
Each template ships with a default accent color (the gradient hero on Sunset, the cool neutral on Minimalist). You can override with a single hex in Settings → Booking page → Accent color. The override flows through every accent surface consistently (buttons, hover states, headlines).
Restraint helps. One brand-color override looks intentional; a full custom palette across all CSS vars looks like a developer site. Default templates exist because they already work.