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A poster developed for fractalPHX, Finish What I Start is a poster focusing on New Years Resolutions. I play with the phrase, keeping it slightly humorous but maintaining visual impact, from any distance.

A poster developed during collage, this AIGA promotional poster is directed at Design students. It draws the viewer in with it's printing motifs and vibrant, yet strict, CMYK color palette.

Designed for the first Phoenix Design Week, I took an anti-computer stance with this piece, opting to create my typography out of the natural landscape in Arizona. The phrase "Phoenix Design Is Natural" has dual meaning, in that design comes natural, along with the fact that in the metropolis of Phoenix, there are still desert landscapes.

A shirt designed for Enso Apparel, an eco-friendly shirt company, Love is Electric plays with the duality of the message, in that love can be electrifying & makes a natural connection by utilizing the texture of a solar panel in the background. The typography is hand-made.

A poster designed to promote fractalPHX, this design plays off of the grid created by a mathematical fractal, the Sierpinski Triangle, and could theoretically be repeated forever.

This project originally started out as a poster to promote the AIGA chapter at NAU. The idea is that design is subjective. During it's run, people wrote on the posters, which then inspired this evolution into a Chalkboard, with vinyl lettering affixed to it.

One of my final school projects was to create a self-promotional piece. Being a huge comic fan, I appropriated an issue of Doctor Strange, circa 1968, while retaining the colors and feel of the aged comic book. I added myself & numerous nerdy references/design references to create a funny, yet yet excellent example of my abilities.

I have created a few typefaces, Gonzo is a display typeface, inspired by the art of Ralph Steadman & the writings of Hunter S. Thompson. Comprised of different examples of my handwriting with an ink pen, this typeface would be best suited for anything aggressive or unique.

During my time in New York, I have developed projects inspired by the sights & designs of the city. This one, Less Is More, is a part poster/proof of concept for a project that involves shadow based typography. The poster is printed on silver paper, but the installation would be gray paint, wood, cardstock in order to build the letter walls where the shadows would come from, & of course, the light. This is a piece truly meant to be seen in person.

The phrase is attributed to Debbie Millman.

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