
An evolving generative art brand.
Create your own Spookee characters. Just click the button below to resurrect a Spookee from the grave—save the Spookee and add it to the gallery, then print it on killer merchandise. It’s so much fun it’s spooky!

Muertos
- Empty
- Skull: Muertos
- Mouth: Golden Calavera
- Nose: Bloody
- Eyes: Red
- Death Cause: Bored to death by an electric douchergheist.
- Death Day: April 11, 2020
Be part of the (f)art.
Spookees are an evolving generative art collection of minimalist design characters. I’m continually adding new traits to create an endless range of possibilities. You can help by saving your favorite Spookees to the community gallery.
Super Rare Spookees
More colors = more rare. And there are 4 possible colors.
There’s a method to this madness. Some traits are common. Some are rare. There’s some sh*t in this collection so rare it may never be unearthed. In fact, you could resurrect Spookees for years and never meet the same one. So if you resurrect a rare Spookee featuring multiple colors and animation, consider saving it from the abyss. Your Spookee will be eternally grateful.
What the f*** is this sh**!?
Spookees is my personal passion project—an amalgamation of art, animation, code, and design. Spookees are a killer generative art brand and an evolving art collection, designed to bring some fun back to the internet.
Connect
Join the Spookees mailing list and follow us for the latest news.
Got questions?
I get it. This is all pretty weird.
What is Spookees?
Spookees is a tongue-in-cheek generative art experiment that celebrates the weird, cute, and spooky side of minimal character design. Every Spookee you generate is one-of-a-kind — no two are ever the same. You can save your favorite Spookees, share them in the gallery, or print them on shirts, posters, and more.
Can I own my Spookee?
Yes! You can download your Spookee as an SVG file, or order prints and merch featuring your exact character. If you create an account, you can also save your generated Spookees and add them to the community gallery.
How many Spookees exist?
There are millions of possible combinations, thanks to the layering and trait system we built. That means even if you generate a thousand Spookees, you’ll probably never see the same one twice.
Who created Spookees?
Spookees was created by David Morgan, a designer, developer, and artist based in Sarasota, Florida. It began as a creative side project exploring generative art, humor, and the fun intersection between design and technology.
What is generative art?
Generative art is artwork created using a set of rules, code, and randomization — not by AI prompts or human hands alone.
Each Spookee is built by code that mixes and matches hand-drawn elements like skulls, eyes, and accessories in endless combinations. Think of it like digital DNA — every character is unique, but they all share a common visual style.
Spookees takes it one step further as a generative art brand that invites participants to share in its evolution, and order unique personalized merchandise that they generate.
How is Spookees different?
Most generative art projects either rely on AI tools or are tied to NFTs. Spookees is different:
- It’s not an AI art project, and it’s not an NFT collection.
- The Spookees engine was custom-built for fun, accessibility, and creativity — anyone can generate their own character right on the site.
- The focus is on art, design, and humor, not speculation or hype.
Each Spookee exists purely for your enjoyment — to make you smile, laugh, or say, “What the hell is that thing?”
Is Spookees made with AI?
Nope! Spookees are not AI-generated.
Every asset — from bones to expressions — was illustrated by hand using the Illustrator pen tool by artist and developer David Morgan. The generative magic happens when custom code assembles these pieces into unique characters. It’s art made with design and code, not by machine learning.
Why did you make Spookees?
Because the internet needs more weird things made with intention and craft. Spookees is a reminder that code can be creative, and that art can be fun, strange, and beautifully imperfect.



