Diversity Campaign.
2007 award winning poster campaign celebrating the ‘International day against homophobia’. An awareness campaign that explores the international aspect of the subject. This live brief was completed in collaboration with charities LGBT and IDAHO.

Nameless Streets in London.
A visual and analytical guide documenting London’s unknown nameless streets/roads. Street signage was created to allow the user to locate each nameless street, while using the guide together. This live brief was completed in collaboration with The Design Museum’s exhibition‘Cities’.
A-POP (a piece of paper).
This sculpture was created in response to the motivations and beliefs of designer Issey Miyake. The concept was created by using the A-POC Collection (a piece of cloth) as inspiration.Part 1 of the The Design Museum’s exhibition‘Cities’.
Existence. She was here!
This visual book documents a quater of an existence. This method relies soley on the humans journey gathering a collection of her traces such as travel and venue tickets. The aim was to communicate the individuals past without having to look at their journey via photographs.
Abstracted.
This project was inspired by The Guardian’s centre page entitled ‘eyewitness’. Abstracting the main elements of the spread such as the use of space and cmyk, allows the page to be viewed from an alternative perspective in a new format.
Carl Johann Magazine.
An innovative design for upcoming science magazine entitled Carl Johann for German technology company, Freudenberg-Nok. Collaboration was made as lead illustrator under the direction of Design Director, Andre Metzen at MetaDesign Berlin. (featured: water/ light/city editions)
Prospectus 2006-2007.
Printed documentation for Saturday and vacation courses for LCC (formerly LCP). This project was completed as an internship with the in house university design studio The Design Practice.
Zeitungs/Newspapers.
Using Newspapers as a concept communicating photographic journeys. Direction by Berlin designers Michael Klar and Severin Wucher at the University of the Arts Berlin (Universitat der Kunst Berlin) Part of an Erasmus exchange scheme 2008.
Research Magpie Slogans.
Magpie: ‘Used in similes or comparisons to refer to a person who collects things, esp. things of little use or value, or a person who chatters idly.’
This research project was derived from a personal collection analysing slogans in forms of t-shirts, badges, graffiti and other mediums in-order to determine the popularity.