Premium Artist Websites

Built tolook serious.

Professional artist websites that keep the work current, easy to share, and easier to manage.

Lucero del Mar

Soprano Website

Sergio Augusto

Tenor Website

Caterina Secchi

Mezzo-Soprano Website

Tamia Dayanari

Soprano Website

Ryan Henry

Baritone Website

MIA Artists Management

Artist Management Roster

Urban Photography

Photography Portfolio

Lucero del Mar

Soprano Website

Sergio Augusto

Tenor Website

Caterina Secchi

Mezzo-Soprano Website

Tamia Dayanari

Soprano Website

Ryan Henry

Baritone Website

MIA Artists Management

Artist Management Roster

Urban Photography

Photography Portfolio

Sound familiar?

You did not build your career to keep fixing your website.

A website should help people understand your work, trust you, and find what they need. It should not become another thing you have to chase every week.

Templates look easy at first

They seem cheaper, fast, and simple. But a template still needs your words, images, links, pages, settings, and updates to be handled well.

The upkeep becomes the real cost

After launch, you still have to manage dates, headshots, press files, links, pages, fixes, and every small change. Paying more does not help if you are still doing the work yourself.

Your site falls behind your work

When the site is hard to maintain, it stops matching your actual career. That can make a serious artist look less prepared than they really are.

What usually happens

The usual options still leave hidden work for you.

The problem is not only getting a site online. It is keeping it useful while your career keeps moving.

01

Website builders still make you do the work

You pick a platform, then still spend hours writing pages, placing images, checking mobile views, fixing links, and keeping everything current.

02

Templates do not know your career

A template can look fine on day one, but it does not know your media, outside listings, performances, press needs, or how often your work changes.

03

A pretty site can still become stale

If updates are hard, the site falls behind. You end up changing the same bio, dates, photos, and links in too many places.

Your site should work with you, not against you.

What the site should do

Built around the artist, not the platform.

The site should lower the work behind the scenes. It should hold your materials, support your updates, and stay ready as your career changes.

A toolbox graphic representing the artist tools and materials the site is built to support.

The system handles

A custom site system shaped around your career, not a template.

A visual editor you own, so updates do not break the design.

One source for bios, photos, dates, links, press files, and media.

Connections or one-time uploads from sources you already update.

Room for stores, licensing, newsletters, templates, and other business tools.

Mobile-ready pages that feel polished on phones too.

One-time build price, with optional maintenance if you want support.

Featured sites

Forget templates. Get a site made for you.

Your site should keep up with you. Update one source instead of fixing the same bio, photos, dates, and links in five different places. This is NOT the 90s.

Visual editing
Organized content
One source for updates
Sergio Augusto tenor website design shown across desktop and mobile.

Tenor website

Sergio Augusto

The core system: visual editing for the artist's vision.

Sergio's site is built for artists who want to update directly and see how the page feels while they work. Photos, pages, performances, and materials stay organized inside one polished site.

Direct visual editingSee the site as you updateOrganized artist materials
View site
Urban Photography portfolio design shown across desktop and mobile.

Photography portfolio

Urban Photography

A site that used the Airtable gallery they already had.

This photography build did not need to start over. It plugged the current Airtable repository into a better site, so the gallery could keep using the workflow that already worked. Other builds can use Google Drive, Dropbox, or just the core editor.

Kept the Airtable galleryNo rebuild from scratchGoogle Drive or Dropbox possible
View site
Lucero del Mar soprano website hero design.

Soprano website

Lucero del Mar

A singer site connected to Eventbrite and Operabase.

Lucero's site can pull from outside event sources, so she does not need to update performances in two places. The same idea works when an artist regularly updates another site for events.

Eventbrite connectionOperabase connectionOther sources possible
View site

Built for artists

What the website handles for you.

The site is not just a prettier page. It is the home base for your updates, materials, outside listings, and the tools you already use.

Artist website designs shown across desktop, tablet, and mobile.

Visual editing is part of the system

Update pages, photos, events, and text directly, with a clearer view of how the site will look to visitors.

Update one source instead of five places

Keep bios, photos, dates, and links current from one place, so the site can keep up as your work changes.

Connect the sources you already update

Use an existing Airtable gallery, Google Drive, Dropbox, calendars, Eventbrite, or pull events from sites like Operabase.

Give every material a clear home

Organize photos, videos, bios, repertoire, press files, event links, and contact details so people can find what they need.

Start custom, then grow with it

The site is made around the artist, not a template. Add tickets, recordings, merch, donations, or new sections only when they fit.

What artists said

A polished site should still feel personal.

The system matters, but the artist still comes first. These sites are built to feel professional without sanding away the person behind the work.

"I'm extremely pleased with it, if you're looking for something modern yet classy do contact her!"

Sergio Augusto

Tenor

"Faithe Yates is the best! She understood my vision and turned it into something beautiful and magistral."

Lucero del Mar

Performing Artist

Process

Built for artists who do not have time to babysit a website.

We start with a session about your style, goals, and what you want the site to do. Then I set up a system that cuts down work you may not even know is taking your time.

01

Start with your goals and vibe

We talk through who you are, what you want the site to do, what you already use, and what feels hard to keep updated.

02

Set up your visual editor

Your site gets a visual editor you own, so you can update pages, photos, events, and text without breaking the design.

03

Use what already exists

If you already update another site with events or media, we can pull from sources like Operabase, Airtable, Eventbrite, Drive, or Dropbox, or do a one-time upload.

04

Add business tools if they help

Add maintenance, branded newsletter templates, a store, licensing tools, or auto updates only if they make your work easier.

You own it

Custom system. One-time build price. Optional support when you want it.

You own the site system. Maintenance, auto newsletters, branded templates, store tools, licensing systems, and source connections can be added as upgrades.

Start a project

Ready for a website that keeps up with your work?

Send your current site, the materials you need online, or the work you are tired of managing. I will help map the setup that makes the most sense for your career.

Good fit if you need

A custom artist website built around your work.
Cleaner updates for performances, media, galleries, press files, and outside sources.
A build you own, with optional support if you do not want to manage every piece yourself.

Typical reply time: within one business day.