Collection of one-off design experiments from testing ideas to learning new design styles. Click to learn about the process in how these design experiments came together.
Experiments
01
“People of the Park” Illustration Series
02
Collection of hand made apparel and other shirt designs.
03
Design an animation the creates form to the idea of goofing off.
04
Create a design that shows dimension and space using hand made type.
05
Design an animation that inspires the feeling of flight.
06
Collaborative “Bored Design” piece with designer Reem Hinedi.
07
Design a series of three typographic posters for the Fast Company Innovation Festival. Each poster will need to work cohesively as a series while also being unique to each of the three speakers you are promoting.
08
Develop a poster design that explores a single typographic character as a multifaceted window into shape and rhythm.
09
Shred Aus. is a tourism website for BMX riders coded from scratch using HTML & CSS. It includes the best skateparks to hit, cheap camping, couch surfing, and other attractions that riders can use if they ever plan to travel to Australia. This website only includes what BMX riders would be looking for in a site like this. It includes the descriptions and locations of skateparks, places where people can sleep for cheap or free camping opportunities, and the “must see attractions” like monuments or Natonal Parks, but not heavy tourism spots. There is no travel site for BMX riders, so why not make it a thing!
10
Emulate the style of vintage Porsche ads like their “Nobody’s Perfect” and “Porsche separates Le Mans from Le Boys” Ads from the 80s. I wanted to showcase the Porsche 917 as a Race-car way ahead of its time breaking many records at the 1971 Le Mans that took over 40 years to even match. I tried to show that by using the funny/sassy copy that Porsche is known for all while keeping it with the same aesthetic as their old ads.
11
Design a series of 4 posters for Beeple’s Uncertain Futures art exhibition. My concept is to play off the exhibitions name along with using Beeple’s “Everydays” pieces where he has created a piece of artwork every day for the last ten years. In Beeple’s work he shows a lot of dystopian futuristic settings along with science fiction. I wanted my posters to show off the sheer amount of work Beeple has while creating eye catching posters. I want the viewer to be overloaded with information upon first look, while still leaving enough for viewer to want more and have a reason to go to the exhibition.

