Studio Invoice Template

Oversized title, thick borders, architectural grid.

The Studio template opens with a 68px title that anchors the entire page. The word "INVOICE" sits at the top in a size usually reserved for posters and title slides. Below it, a 4px black border cuts across the full width of the document, establishing the visual weight that carries through every section.

Metadata is arranged in a three-column grid: invoice number, issue date, and due date each occupy their own cell. The grid uses the same thick 4px borders as dividers, creating a structural rhythm that feels architectural. Sender and client information follows in a two-column split, separated by another heavy rule.

Best for

What makes it different

Scale is the first thing you notice. The 68px title is roughly three times the size of a typical invoice heading. It is not decorative. It establishes the document's identity instantly, which matters when your invoice arrives in an inbox alongside dozens of other attachments.

The 4px borders are the structural backbone. Most templates use 1px rules or no rules at all. The Studio template's thick lines give the document a drafted, architectural quality. They create compartments rather than suggestions of separation. Each section is clearly bounded.

The three-column metadata grid is unusual for an invoice. Instead of stacking invoice details vertically or tucking them into a corner, the Studio template gives each datum equal horizontal space. The grid reads quickly and looks deliberate. It signals that the person sending this invoice thinks about layout.

How to use this template

  1. Open invoice.Now and select "Studio" from the template picker.
  2. Your company name appears below the oversized INVOICE title. Fill it in along with your address and contact details.
  3. Add client information. It populates the right side of the two-column sender/client block.
  4. The three-column metadata grid auto-fills with the invoice number and dates you enter.
  5. Add line items. The items table uses the same thick-border style as the rest of the document.
  6. Export to PDF. The oversized type and heavy borders reproduce sharply at any resolution.

Frequently asked questions

Is the 68px title too large for a professional invoice?

It is large on purpose. The Studio template is designed for creative professionals whose work involves visual impact. The scale communicates confidence. If you prefer a quieter approach, the Minimal template uses standard heading sizes.

How does this template handle long line item lists?

The thick-bordered items table scales to any length. The heavy rules between the header row and body provide clear visual anchoring, so the table remains readable even with 20 or more rows. The PDF extends to additional pages automatically, though very long descriptions may continue onto a new page.

Can I use this for non-creative businesses?

You can, but the design choices are opinionated. The oversized title and architectural grid make a statement that suits creative and design-oriented businesses. For a more neutral professional look, try the Modern template.

What happens to the three-column grid on smaller screens?

The grid adapts to the available width in the browser preview. In the exported PDF, it renders at full document width on A4 or US Letter paper, where all three columns display comfortably side by side.

Create an invoice with the Studio template

For serif elegance, see the Editorial template. For structured card-based sections, try the Modern template. Or explore all templates on the invoice.Now homepage.