This is an ongoing product, that I fully own and develop. Starting from market research, to wireframe, to development. Along with a co-founder we are trying to bring AI to the world of psychiatry and mental health treatment. The application will be deployed in stages where we can iterate and pivot where necessary. The company and design model is based on lean principles and focussed on delivering an uncompromised product.
Early design for a textile company here in Los Angeles. They needed a new logo, photos of the warehouse, and a new website.
Set of the official music video for Digging for Windows by Zach de la Rocha (former front man of Rage Against the Machine).
You need to give yourself room to be creative. To experiment and do things without a deadline, without a client, just the freedom to try new things without an ulterior goal besides getting better. I try to keep myself motivated if there's even a flashbulb of inspiration, whether it's making cards for my wife, wedding invitations, or logos for made-up companies...I try to use the same process I would if there was a real client.
This is the start of a very large project that started with re-designing the entire non-application portion of the website, including multiple options for non-subscribing users, pricing pages, a new checkout and payment system.
This was a 24-hour job that was rushed because the client was leaving the country and had one shot of getting everything done. The client wanted something very feminine, but serious, and classic.
I love Instagram. My relationship with blogging and social media isn't always an easy marriage. In order to truly speak my mind, I like the semi-anonymity of sites where my real name isn't part of the equation. My first public page was a page I made on Geocities, but quickly after a high school MySpace profile. I became aware how quickly "cool" became cringey in manner. Insagram has been a nice break of remaining shy and exposing a bit of myself, and a challenge to continue to get better at photography.
Part of redoing the website for Thienes Apparel was creating a nice workflow infographic that would explain to future clients the process to get something created with the factory. They wanted an extremely simple site so we were able to just build this as an SVG and keep the site code extremely simple.