Black Girl Joy is a Black woman led nonprofit dedicated to centering rest, wellness, and joy as a birthright for Black women. Through nature based gatherings, creative experiences, and community care, we create spaces where Black women can breathe, belong, and be well.
We are seeking a volunteer Graphic Designer to support our visual identity and help bring our programs and initiatives to life through thoughtful, culturally affirming design.
What You Will Help With
Designing logos and visual identities for Black Girl Joy programs and events
Creating branded materials such as flyers, social media graphics, digital assets, and occasional print pieces
Supporting brand consistency across programs while allowing each initiative its own personality
Collaborating with leadership to translate vision and values into visuals that feel warm, grounded, and intentional
What We Are Looking For
Experience with graphic design tools such as Canva, Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, or similar
An eye for clean, thoughtful design that centers Black women with care and respect
Ability to receive direction and work within an established brand while offering creative input
Comfort working in a mission driven, volunteer based nonprofit environment
You do not need to be a professional designer by trade, but you should feel confident in your design skills and portfolio or examples of work.
Time Commitment
Flexible and project based
Estimated 2 to 6 hours per month depending on upcoming programs
No long term obligation required
Why Volunteer With Black Girl Joy
Use your creative skills to support Black women centered community care
Be part of a growing nonprofit rooted in rest, joy, and sustainability
Receive credit for your work and opportunities to grow with the organization
Work in a space that values clear communication, boundaries, and mutual respect
How to Apply
If interested, please share a brief note about why this role interests you and links or examples of your design work.
We welcome designers who believe that joy is serious work and that visual storytelling matters.