I’ve been drawn to create for as long as I can remember. As a child, my nights often ended with paper, glue, and colored pencils scattered around me — little art projects left behind for my parents to discover in the morning. Whether it was simple drawings, scrapbooks, or anything I could craft with my hands, creating was never just a pastime — it was how I expressed joy, curiosity, and care.
In high school, my creative world expanded. I fell in love with visual arts, sketching, and photography. Each new medium became a mirror, helping me better understand myself and the world around me. These early years helped shape not only my skills, but also my mindset — one rooted in exploration, experimentation, and emotional storytelling.
But at 18, life pulled me in another direction. I chose to pursue a degree outside of the arts, and for a while, I stepped away from the creative path that had once felt so instinctual. It wasn’t easy — something always felt slightly out of place. But, it wasn’t long before I found my way back.
At 22, I discovered branding and web design — two disciplines I hadn’t expected to fall for. While they may seem technical on the surface, I saw them as modern canvases: places where visual identity, narrative, and user experience come together in thoughtful, expressive ways. I immersed myself fully, and over the years, have grown these skills into a true creative practice. Like all forms of art, it’s a journey that never really ends — and that’s exactly what I love about it.
Now, I find myself back where it all began — creating for the joy of it, the meaning in it, the story behind it. I’ve reconnected with the creative parts of me I once left behind: photography, storytelling, writing, and of course, my "latest" medium — web design and development. These aren't separate practices for me. They're different expressions of the same impulse — to see, to feel, to translate the intangible into something others can experience.
In many ways, art isn’t just something I do.
It’s who I am.
Thank you for reading.