
Graphic Design
NYLON Magazine
Website Design for Editorials
Logo re-design and editorial website re-design to evoke NYLON magazine's edgy, young, and carefree aesthetic. The logo utilises a free flowing splatter effect, while the website design uses complementary brush strokes to showcase NYLON's experimental flair and forward thinking audience.





My One Day Book
Editorial Photobook
Editorial fashion photobook and lookbook highlighting youth street fashion with off-grid layouts.



Journey Film Festival
Journey Film Festival is festival calling filmmakers and enthusiasts together to view, critique, and create their own film journey. Each film in the festival involves characters or plot lines that undergo a physical or characteristic journey. As an attendee you are called to choose your story or journey based on the film line up and later encouraged to create your own film journey in one of the festivals workshops.
The film festival poster, program, and logo was designed to evoke a sense of transformation for the viewer and their own journey. Hand-drawn typography and illustrations were created to evoke a sense of nostalgia and familiarity with the viewer, encouraging viewers from all walks of life to participate. The hand-drawn Arctic Tern was chosen to represent the logo for Journey Film Festival, as the animal makes the longest migration journey in the world.





Imagining America C.A.L.L. Conference Visual Identity
After working with a team of 8 graphic design students to develop our own individual concepts at the University of California Davis, my work was chosen to represent the C.A.L.L. (communities, arts, lands, learning) Imagining America Conference, which was hosted by UC Davis in October 2017.
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The final rendition of the visual identity for the conference embodied the concept of using morse code to create a voice wave pattern that emphasized the "all" in C.A.L.L., and further highlighted the goal of the conference to be accessible to all individuals from all walks of life. Thus, resulting in the formation of three interchangeable logo designs, each of which uses morse code and four designated colors to represent a different category of C.A.L.L., including Arts+Lands, Learning, and Communities. The final poster design recognizes the importance of UC Davis as a host institute by utilizing an archived photograph of an agricultural course held at UC Davis.

