A curated collection of open-source themes for the Omarchy desktop environment, complete with previews and installation commands.
Awesome Omarchy is a curated directory of themes for the Omarchy desktop environment. It provides a centralized location to discover, preview, and install community-driven themes that style various components like the desktop, terminal, Neovim, and system bars. The project solves the problem of fragmented theme discovery by offering a single, organized resource.
Omarchy users who want to customize their desktop appearance, as well as theme developers looking to share their creations with the community.
Developers choose Awesome Omarchy because it saves time searching for themes, provides visual previews for informed decisions, and offers secure, verified installation commands—all within a trusted, community-vetted list inspired by the popular "awesome list" format.
A curated list of Omarchy themes. Discover, share, and contribute to a growing collection of themes for Omarchy—all in one place. Inspired by other awesome lists, this repository helps users explore and enhance their Omarchy experience with beautiful, community-driven themes.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Each theme includes a screenshot, allowing users to see the aesthetic before installation, as evidenced by the extensive list with embedded images for every entry.
Provides direct terminal commands like `omarchy-theme-install` or TUI instructions, simplifying setup with one-line installs for all themes.
Aggregates both default and community-contributed themes, encouraging PR submissions to grow the collection, as noted in the contribution guidelines.
Themes are sourced from trusted repositories over HTTPS, with explicit reminders to review READMEs before installation for added safety.
The list is manually curated and lacks built-in search, filtering, or automatic updates, making it harder to discover themes beyond scrolling.
Installation relies on GitHub links that may break if repositories are deleted or renamed, with no fallback or mirroring provided.
While curated, community themes have no formal review process, leading to potential variations in quality, compatibility, or maintenance.