Who I am, Beyond a Digital Designer
I believe good design, whether digital or physical, comes from curiosity, care, and a willingness to get your hands dirty and figure things out.
I’m an artist, maker, designer, and creative thinker who feels most at home building things with my hands. I’ve always been fascinated by the moment when an idea turns from a thought into something real you can see, touch, use, or live with. Whether I’m designing a digital experience, building furniture, or working with different materials, I love turning a vague problem into something thoughtful and tangible.
My creative life has taken many forms. Professionally, I work in UX, transformation, and service design, helping teams make complex systems a little more understandable and more accessible to us humans. But outside of the screen, I’m just as happy in the workshop, designing and building functional furniture, clocks, and light fixtures, or simply finding a new life for recycled materials.
I’m especially interested in creative reuse and transformation. I turn scrap-yard aluminum road signs into handbags and furniture, exploring how utility, sustainability, and art can work together. I love seeing how something made for one purpose can become something new, practical, beautiful, and fun. It’s satisfying to give materials a second life and see what they can become with a bit of patience and creativity.
At heart, I’m someone who believes creativity isn’t only about aesthetics — it’s about curiosity, experimentation, and care. I like making things that look right, feel right, and work well. I craft. Maybe it’s a digital interface, a piece of furniture, or something that doesn’t quite fit into a category. Making is how I think, how I solve problems, and how I understand the world.
Inspirations and interests
My inspiration comes from craftsmanship, industrial materials, and the quiet ingenuity you see in maker culture; you use what you have, figure things out, and learn from your failures. I’m inspired by designers and makers who skirt the line between art and utility and take pride in doing things well. I find that complexity is the enemy of good design. The process of experimenting, refining, and shaping ideas into something real is energizing. I am inspired by works that feel natural, honest, and built to last.



