I studied UX design and quickly found myself drawn to the space where user experience and visual communication overlap, the kind of work where how something looks and how it works are inseparable. That's shaped most of my work, and it's the intersection I keep coming back to.
Ever since I started learning about UX, I've genuinely become picky about digital experiences. I notice when something feels visually off-balance, when hierarchy is fighting itself, or when a design is working harder than it needs to. That sensitivity to detail is something I bring into everything I make.
I tend to approach work in a calm, considered way, taking time to understand a problem before jumping to solutions. I'm drawn to clarity over complexity, and I find more value in something intentional and restrained than something that's trying too hard. My instinct is always to subtract. If something can be said visually, it probably shouldn't be said at all, and if the design is doing its job, you shouldn't notice it's there.
I'm always open to new opportunities. if something about this caught your eye, feel free to reach out.
A personal exploration of identity and perception. This project examines how we exist differently in each relationship, a concept that informs how I approach brand identity
