10 Vector Packs for Designers Who Are Done With Generic

10 Vector Packs for Designers Who Are Done With Generic

Skip the forgettable freebies. These 10 curated vector packs bring real aesthetic punch to streetwear, poster, and digital design. Find your next go-to pack.

Most vector packs are forgettable. You download them, drop a couple of shapes into a project, and never open the folder again. The ones that actually earn a permanent spot in your assets folder have something in common: they were built with a specific aesthetic and a clear point of view. Generic shapes serve generic work. If you're making anything with a real look, you need packs that have one too. Here are ten worth keeping.

1. Label Asset Pack (Vol. 01) by HVNTER

Label Asset Pack (Vol. 01)

Label Asset Pack Vol. 01 is 107 industrial-themed assets built for designers who want their work to feel like it came off a factory floor, not a Canva template. The kind of stuff that makes packaging look like it's been handled, shipped, and lived in. It hits that brutalist streetwear frequency that's been running through brand and merch work for a while now.

What makes it useful: the assets are specific enough to have real character but flexible enough to work across packaging, branding, and apparel graphics without looking out of place. The pack comes in SVG (individual vector files), PNG at 1200ppi, and an AI vector sheet. If you're building streetwear brands, doing DTC packaging, or just want your editorial layouts to have some industrial weight, this one delivers.

2. Vector Shapes Volume I by MiksKS

Vector Shapes Volume I

145 geometric vector shapes that can be stacked, layered, and combined into something that doesn't look like anyone else's work. Vector Shapes Volume I sits somewhere between brutalism and early-2000s internet aesthetics, the kind of shapes you'd have seen on underground album covers before that whole visual language got absorbed by the mainstream.

The practical advantage here is the editable stroke width on some assets, which gives you compositional control most shape packs won't offer. Formats include AI, EPS, PNG, and Photoshop CSH files, so you're not locked into one workflow. Build poster layouts with them, use them as logo accents, drop them on sticker sheets. They're designed to be combined, which is the right approach.

3. Graphs & Diagrams Vol.2 by God Control

Graphs & Diagrams Vol.2

Pulled straight from vintage books, technical manuals, and old magazines, then rebuilt into hi-res assets. Graphs and Diagrams Vol. 2 has that particular energy of found imagery that's been elevated by context: a 1960s scientific chart dropped into a poster layout looks considered in a way that a custom-drawn shape often doesn't. God Control went deep for this one, sourcing over 200 graphics that have genuine visual history behind them.

You're getting 206 PNGs, Photoshop brushes (ABR), AI files, and EPS, all at high resolution. The brush set is a smart addition if you want to incorporate the graphics directly into painted or textured compositions rather than dropping in flat vectors. Strong territory for poster work, merch graphics, and album art where a bit of institutional authority goes a long way.

4. CYBER2K by Massive Supply Co.

CYBER2K - Futuristic/Y2K Resource Pack

This is less a vector pack and more a complete production system for a specific aesthetic. CYBER2K covers the full stack: 135 icons, 20 textures at 600ppi in JPG and TIFF, 20 tribal and early-2000s vectors in flat and chrome PNG, 5 distress Photoshop actions, and a bonus layout generator script for Illustrator. Massive Supply Co. built this for designers who want to work fast inside a tight visual language without having to source assets from five different places.

The Illustrator layout script alone sets it apart from the standard shape dump. If you're producing social content, poster series, or album visuals at volume, that kind of generative infrastructure changes the pace you can work at. The chrome PNG variants are particularly sharp for anything leaning into the reflective, maximalist end of the current nostalgia cycle.

5. Sci-Fi Panels Vector Pack by MiksKS

Sci-Fi Panels Vector Pack

Greebles are the unsung hero of futuristic design. They're the panels, connectors, and surface details that make something read as technical rather than just geometric, and the Sci-Fi Panels Vector Pack has 144 of them. MiksKS built this with proper Illustrator functionality in mind: live, non-expanded strokes you can adjust without breaking the artwork, and three variants per panel covering complex, filled, and outline versions.

Resolution is serious: PNG exports at 4000px, 300ppi. You're also getting AI, EPS, PSD, and a bonus Photoshop gradient sheet. The three-variant system is what justifies the pack over trying to source individual assets. One shape becomes three usable elements, and the stroke editability means you can adapt them to a layout's weight without pulling everything apart. Good for gaming visuals, poster work, and any digital branding that needs to communicate technical depth.

6. Abstract Symbol Pack by HVNTER

Abstract Symbol Pack

HVNTER's second entry here, and it's doing something different from the Label Pack. The Abstract Symbol Pack is 61 assets that sit in that territory between symbol and mark. They're not icons, not logos, not decorative flourishes exactly. They're the kind of shapes that feel like they should mean something, which makes them useful for work where ambiguity is an asset.

Formats are AI, SVG (individual files), PNG at 1200ppi, and PDF. That's a complete set for anyone working across print and digital simultaneously. The streetwear and merch application is obvious, but these also work well in editorial contexts where you need a visual element that has personality without being too literal. Sixty-one unique assets is a solid number, enough variety to stay useful across multiple projects without becoming a bloated pack you'll never fully use.

7. 250 UltraVibe Graphic Pack by Vanzyst

250 UltraVibe Graphic Pack

Two hundred and fifty assets inspired by the chunky, pixelated aesthetics of eighties and nineties gaming, rebuilt for modern production at 5000x5000px, 300ppi. The UltraVibe Graphic Pack by Vanzyst covers pixelated objects, rounded pixel graphics, maximalist icons, and geometric elements in a style that's been moving through streetwear, merch, and festival graphics for the past few years without showing many signs of slowing down.

File formats include AI, EPS, SVG, PDF, PNG, and JPG, so this is functional across essentially every workflow including Canva if that's part of your toolkit. The scale of the pack means you're getting enough variety to use different subsets across different projects without everything looking like it came from the same source. If you're doing high-volume merch or building a visual system with a retro-digital personality, this earns its place fast. There's plenty more vector work to dig through if this direction is your focus.

8. DIAGRAMS by Massive Supply Co.

DIAGRAMS - 250+ Mathematical / Scientific / Engineering Vectors

Where Graphs and Diagrams Vol. 2 leans into the found-imagery approach, DIAGRAMS goes harder on the historical source material. Over 250 vectors pulled from nineteenth and twentieth century textbooks and manuals, covering blueprints, graphs, charts, and engineering schematics. They come pre-distressed with a hand-drawn quality that makes them read as archival rather than artificial.

Every file is SVG and PNG at 1000px wide, which keeps things clean and scalable. The specificity of the source material is what makes this pack interesting: these aren't generic graph shapes, they carry the visual conventions of a particular era of scientific communication. Drop them into a poster or a piece of merch and they add a layer of institutional weight that you'd struggle to generate from scratch. Designers working in editorial, art publishing, or anything that wants to borrow from academic visual culture will get a lot out of this.

9. Wave Lines - 100 Vector Shapes by assetpro

Wave Lines - 100 Vector Shapes

One hundred wave line shapes sounds narrow until you see the execution. Wave Lines from assetpro delivers every file in three colour versions, gradient, white, and black, giving you 300 files in total at 5000x5000px, 600dpi across PNG, SVG, and AI. That's a production-ready set, not a preview pack.

Wave forms are one of those shapes with serious range. They work in packaging, on posters, in social graphics, across fashion and apparel, and in web contexts where you need something fluid to break up hard geometry. The transparent background on every PNG means you're placing and compositing, not masking and cutting. The three-version system per shape is the right call here: it means you're not adapting the same file for different colourways, you're just picking the right version for the job.

10. Cyber Shapes Vectors by Afterimagine

Cyber Shapes Vectors

Two hundred elements built around the visual language of cyberpunk interfaces, tech systems, and futuristic HUD design. Cyber Shapes Vectors by Afterimagine is built for designers working in motion graphics, UI overlays, album art, and digital branding where the aesthetic needs to feel genuinely technical rather than decorative. The shapes carry the kind of angular, circuit-informed geometry that reads as systematic rather than random.

Everything is SVG, PDF, and PNG, fully scalable without quality loss. Two hundred elements is enough to build a coherent visual system rather than just accent work, which is where a pack like this really justifies itself. If you're building motion graphics assets, designing posters that need to feel like they're transmitting something, or creating digital identities with a hard-edged futurist personality, this is a focused and well-built resource. If the cyberpunk and futurist direction is where you're spending most of your time, there's more in the staff picks worth looking at.

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