Bank of America: kiosk design

This touch-screen display was designed as part of the Bank of America "Everyone's a Winner" campaign. Consumers were given barcodes to scan at specific Bank of America locations, revealing small prizes and giftcards. This particular kiosk was one of the first produced for the Bank using their new design guidelines. The kiosk was a great success, both in its interactivity, and its role as an "updated brand" piece.

View Gallery


TV Guide: cd rom & intro animation

For the second year in a row, TV Guide commissioned an interactive CD-ROM for the Upfronts. The 2008 theme chosen by the client was "Star Power." An intro animation featuring the famous Hollywood Hills sign (edited slightly, of course) was designed and produced in Flash, and gives a taste of the celebrity-focused programming that debuted the following season. The animation ties in the primary theme graphic -- the "Walk of Fame" star and the TV Guide logo.

View Gallery


Brasserie44: website design & development

Brasserie 44 is the latest John McDonald (Lever House, Lure Fishbar, Chinatown, and MercBar) restaurant in New York City, at the stylish Royalton Hotel. For their site, design focus was placed on the stunning photographs of the restaurant, allowing the rest of the site to seemlessly complement the images without overpowering, getting in the way, or adding unnecessary elements. Each photograph is held between left and right borders to give it the appearance of being lit from behind, and the onscreen menu floats over the photo with subtle transparency.

View Gallery


Bank of America: kiosk design

These screens were part of a kiosk at Bank of America's National Automobile Dealers Association convention. The simple user interface allowed convention goers to easily track down the Bank of America representative(s) for their region and get in touch directly.

View Gallery


Joshua & Elizabeth Morton: wedding invitations & save-the-dates

For the Morton wedding, save-the-dates, invitations, and church pamphlets were designed with the theme of the "sea" (as the wedding reception was held at the Philadelphia Seaport Museum). The classic Hokusai wave was illustrated on the main invitation using subtle filler lines to resemble a woodcut. Specific attention was placed on type treatment -- a mix of classic beauty and a clean, modern look.

View Gallery


C2 Creative: widget concept & design

Apple Dashboard widget concept and design. This piece serves as a fun download for current and potential clients, and introduces one of the chief creative executives at C2 Creative -- Keith -- as the lovable "Wooly Willy."


Colorquick: website redesign

This site was designed as the "corporate face" for ColorQuick, a company bringing streamlined web applications and full-scale customized client suites to the print industry. Because ColorQuick's clients are designers, advertisers, and publishers, the site had to showcase their applications without being divisive. The solution includes extensive illustrations, a flash banner on the homepage, simple structure, and intuitive navigation.

View Gallery
Visit Site



Time Magazine: interactive game concept & design

This Flash game concept was designed for Time Magazine's end-of-year "Time 100" list. The game had an exhausting 10 rounds of 10 questions, each within five categories. To break up the information and keep the game flowing, the resulting concept implemented "rapid fire" rounds, various clickable areas to explore, Time Magazine's original photography, all bonus incentives to keep playing.

View Gallery


Grace Outreach: website redesign

Grace Outreach is a non-profit organization that offers a free program to women, 18 and older, to help get their GED and move into higher education or a better job. The client needed a very easy-to-use site that would establish the organization as professional without being "stuffy," and give its target user incentive to learn more.

The site was done entirely in xhtml and css, with minimal javascript, and then implemented into Contribute for easy content management.

View Gallery
Visit Site


Kayla Peterson: brand identity & website design

Kayla Peterson needed a total brand concept to help introduce her services as a masseuse and personal trainer in New York City. The attention to detail, clean code and design, and basic breakdown of the benefits of Kayla's services sets her practice apart. This project was a full-package of logo design, business cards, website, and copy writing.

View Gallery
Visit Site


Email Blasts: The Outdoor Channel & MGM

The Outdoor Channel introduced their up-fronts with a campaign to reach the "All-American Male." This email blast was one of several interactive marketing tools used to reach advertisers and media professionals.

In 2007, MGM debuted their concept for a television network reaching out to a new generation of viewers. This email blast was sent out to thousands of potential advertisers as a teaser for the the up-fronts.


Walk The Showwebsite design

Walk The Show is a business marketing network for the fashion industry -- A sort of online "trade show" bringing buyers and sellers together regardless of zip code. Site design needed to be clean, minimal, and professional, deferring attention to the products shown and the information provided.

View Gallery


Skyview Dentalwebsite design

For this particular project, the client wanted to showcase three specific products being distributed exclusively. While the user can view all products available, the focus is clearly on three main items. The navigation is simple and intuitive, with the goal being to learn about a product, have the option to purchase it, and to contact the company at any time.
Currently In Development

View Gallery


Travelport: new-employee packet concept design

Design comps for a new employee packet that would help recruits "navigate" their new surroundings, and become acquainted with the company. The packet was styled to look like a travel guidebook, with executives serving as "guides" and comprehensive company information broken down in the sidebars.

View Gallery


New Designer Smile: brand identity & website design

The New Designer Smile website zooms in on a specific market in cosmetic dentistry. The website is meant to be lighthearted, yet informative about common cosmetic and corrective procedures. The look-and-feel is unthreatening, clean, even soothing -- feelings rarely associated with dentistry.

View Gallery
Visit Site


Yum! Brands: interactive game interface design

These screens were designed for a Yum! Brands interactive game that would serve as an educational tool for Yum employees. An illustrator was brought on to show what the various levels would look like, passing from prehistoric times to a "space age." The game console itself reinforces the Yum! franchises and general company look-and-feel.

View Gallery


The N Network: media kit website design

The N Network wanted a media kit site to accompany their up-front presentations. This site allows advertising reps to navigate through and learn more about the network's various network assets, see press releases, recent acquisitions, a programming schedule, etc.

Although a sales site, the look and feel was designed to mimic the fun, young, trendy style, seen among the N Network's target viewer demographics, giving a live example of how The N relates to the pre-teen and teenage set.

View Gallery



The ROHO Group: website redesign

The ROHO Group needed a quick "Web 2.0" answer to their outdated table-based site. A site that would enhance their brand without losing a vastly traditional client base. Especially necessary was a well-organized user interface, which had been severely lacking in the company's previous site iteration.

Work on the new site began with the establishment of a true UI built around a strict directory structure. This system better lends itself to directly informing potential clients about the company's various offerings, and allows them to then browse the full product line as necessary.

The design itself is clean and striking, focusing on five cohesive "landing pages", and containing subsections with further information.

View Gallery



Creative Assignments: video self-portrait

Produced for a visual communications class at Washington University in Saint Louis. A little bit of self-explanatory quirkiness...

Please download Flash Player: Get Adobe Flash Player

Creative Assignments: type & illustration

Various "creative assignments" worked on at Washington University in Saint Louis. Alphabet Reimagined, raising consciousness of "found art." Portrait in Type, a self-portrait composed entirely of common character glyphs. Lebowski Fest, an exercise in digital illustration, done in the style of graphic artist Bill Green, and paying tribute to "The Jesus".

View Gallery