Webflow work you can hand off and forget about
Hiring a freelance Webflow developer for your agency is hard to get right from a portfolio alone. The work is one thing. How someone communicates and hits deadlines is the rest.
People Worth The Work
Some of the good agencies I work with, and the best people behind them.
Different sizes, different countries, different kinds of clients. What they share is taste, a healthy way of running projects, and people who are good to spend a working week with.

The cooperation with Çağdaş has always been creative and purposeful. Çağdaş is a talented Webflow Developer who can handle everything from concept,to design, to deployment. What sets him apart is his ability to think outside the box. He doesn't just work through requirements, but also checks them for reasonableness. This makes a collaboration very enjoyable.




Very responsive, thorough in his reporting, and a competent designer. What more could you ask for? I look forward to hiring Çağdaş again!




I worked with Çağdaş on several Webflow projects, and every time he showed unmatched professionalism and relentless dedication to complete the project on time and with high quality. Very pleasant to work with.



Çağdaş is very easy to work with. His quality of work is pretty good and he is very knowledgeable and experienced about Webflow that will help my business in the long term.


The Work Around The Work
Working together, month to month
Most of the agencies above came back for more than one project. Some for many. A few of them I now consider friends.
After a while, certain patterns started showing up across these relationships. Small things that seem to make the work feel good on both sides.
You'll always know where the project stands. Getting in touch is easy and fast.
A weekly call on Tuesdays usually covers the bigger picture. If your week gets too packed, a quick Loom recap goes out instead, so you stay in the loop.
Day-to-day, you and I chat on Basecamp. Your messages get a reply fast, and if anything's about to shift on timing, you'll hear from me first.
The Webflow developer with a design background.
Mobile breakpoints when the Figma is desktop-only. New pages added to a live site without needing a fresh design first. Small adjustments along the way.
Design and development happen in the same place, which keeps the project moving without the usual back-and-forth.
Built on Client-First.
Every project gets built on Client-First from the start, even when the timeline gets tight. No improvised class names, no shortcut components.
A few months in, the Webflow project looks the same as it did on day one.
Plugging into your agency's flow.
Bringing someone new into a team takes some thought. I've worked with enough agencies to step into the rhythm quickly and keep the project moving.
Most projects run on Basecamp and a weekly call. If your team or your project needs something different, that's familiar ground.
A clean handover for your team.
A screencast walkthrough of the build, written documentation of the components and integrations, and a 30-day priority support window after launch.
Your team has what they need to keep things running, on their own terms.
WORK BEHIND YOUR BRAND
How the work stays inside your agency.
Your client only sees your brand. Communication with them goes through you, and the work runs under your agency's name. An agency email, a guest seat in your Webflow workspace, whatever helps the handoff feel clean.
NDAs are part of how I work with agencies. Send yours over and it gets signed the same day. The Webflow project belongs to you, along with the code, the CMS, and the documentation. If our work ever wraps, you keep all of it.
What stays public is your call
Portfolio entries, case studies, blog posts, and any references to the work need your sign-off. If a new agency ever wants to speak to one of the names above, that's easy to arrange.