Audience Presentation
I built a slide deck on the web for a presentation on my work and how it relates to the concepts of Audience Studies as part of Dan Cavicchi’s Audience class at the Rhode Island School of Design.
I built a slide deck on the web for a presentation on my work and how it relates to the concepts of Audience Studies as part of Dan Cavicchi’s Audience class at the Rhode Island School of Design.
I wrote this essay for Dan Cavicchi’s Audience class at the Rhode Island School of Design. Except this time it wasn’t reproduced here for posterity, it was only produced here. There’s no question that audience has always been an important consideration in design. Hell, it isn’t design if there isn’t an audience. But the web has […]
A weird project name and idea, but was incredibly fun to build. The premise is simple, but there are a bunch of little details that hopefully make it fun to use. There’s no way for me to explain it better than you using it for yourself.
Try it on your iPhone too!
While interning in Studio 612A, Tina had an idea for a small web app that would allow people to make their own icebreakertags, so I designed and built it.
A collaboration with Micah Barrett. Frustrated with our Graphic Design department’s lack of focus on screen design and with the less-than-inspiring prompt we received for the semester’s final assignment, we decided to create a campaign to raise awareness instead.
A web-view of a poster I designed for closing elevator doors. It is advertising http://in.tercour.se, a RISD student chatroom, built by Jack Jennings. (If it helps, RISD’s unofficial mascot is “Scrotie”, a giant penis… don’t ask.)
There is a big difference between spec work or crowd sourcing and voicing ideas about a redesign on Dribbble, and that difference is audience.
A post on Drawar criticizing some designers’ reaction to Gap’s new brand seemed so off-base to me I had to respond.
After two years of using WebAdvisor at RISD, I finally had enough. Now with Chrome and Safari extensions, I never have to look at its interface again.
Matchuppps was my entry into the 10kApart competition. The prompt was to create a web application in less than 10KB of code. Matchuppps came in at 6,216 bytes and went on to win the “Best Design” award.
An expansion on Sasha Grief’s tutorial on Dribbble to make it work in HTML/CSS.
Only works in Webkit browsers.
A style of writing CSS that I have been using lately that combines the benefits of the multi-line and single-line styles.
You shouldn’t need to “test an idea out” before you run it on your own blog. Have people forgotten that blogs are about opinions?
A simple experiment with animating more hip-hop lyrics.
Art direction doesn’t need to be an all-or-nothing treatment. Who’s to say there’s nothing between completely art-directed content and the default template?
An experiment based off of David Desandro’s post on his blog.
When the iPad was released, one of its features caught my attention: the 1024 x 768 resolution. That meant that my website was definitely too wide, so I readjusted.
Résumés in actual HTML are becoming commonplace on portfolio sites, but they often don’t get used to their full potential.
This site has gone through a lot of redesigns. This latest design is my attempt to get up to date with current standards.
This is where I will discuss my thoughts as they relate to design. It will be an interesting exercise.