Four projects spanning app design, e-commerce UI, editorial web, and brand systems — each owned end to end, each with a distinct design language built from scratch.
The Black Women's Mural in Englewood, NJ is a 525 sq. ft. tribute to Black women suffragists and activists. When the Northern NJ Community Foundation commissioned a digital companion to the mural, I conceived, pitched, designed, built, and filmed it entirely myself.
The site includes an interactive mural, historical timelines, a national mural map, and — most powerfully — video interviews I recorded and edited with the living women depicted on the mural. It is live at blackwomensmuralnj.org.
Conceived, pitched, designed, built, and filmed solo — including video interviews with the living women depicted on the mural, recorded and edited by Lilith Haig.
Creative Placemaking Communities needed a full visual identity for their flagship event — a groundbreaking three-day professional development gathering in Chicago for 500 creatives. I owned everything visual: brand identity, website, and campaign materials.
The rebrand drove a 400%+ increase in web engagement and campaign work increased event attendance by 40%. The visual language — bold stacked display type, gradient mesh photography, high-contrast editorial layouts — positioned CPC as a serious force in the creative placemaking world.
Divvy is a parenting safety e-commerce platform — "the world's nanny" — that takes the label-checking out of buying products for children. The start-up needed a full UI system to present as proof of concept to investors. I owned the entire design system end to end.
The result is a warm, approachable product platform — sunny yellows, playful illustration, smart filtering by ingredient and safety concern — that communicates both trustworthiness and ease. Every screen, component, and interaction pattern was designed by me.
Cartwheel is a concept app for discovering public art — an AR-enabled platform that lets users find, capture, and collect artworks in their city. In a collaborative project, I was solely responsible for the full UI design while teammates focused on business strategy and marketing.
The design language is clean and minimal — a refined serif wordmark, light blue tones, and a card-based interface that puts the art front and centre. Key screens include AR capture, map discovery, community reviews, and a personal gallery.