Her work spans across industries including (but definitely not limited to) experiential marketing, consumer packaged goods, luxury apparel and experiences, cannabis, fine arts, A&R, up-and-coming local brands, and conservation.
When she is not traveling to far-flung destinations you can find her in Chicago browsing bookstores and resale shops with a coffee in hand, looking for her next source of inspiration.
Photography Portfolio
Design Archive
Resume
01_Clients
BMG
Ruinart
Veuve Clicquot
Krug
Dom Pérignon
alder apparel
Kimberly Clark
The Clorox Brand
Sam’s Club
Nintendo
02_Certificates
Motion:
Creative Strategy Bootcamp
Strong Brand Social:
F- the Algorithm 2.0
03_Volunteering
AIGA:
Mentorship Program
Chicago Fashion Coalition:
Head of Editorial
Photographer
04_Experience
Photographer:
Freelance
Moët Hennessy USA
Art Director:
Freelance
Marketing Werks
Promoworks
Product Connections
Copywriter:
Net-A-Porter
Mr. Porter
05_Glowing Reviews
Person, Position @ Company:
iLorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since 1966, when designers at Letraset and James Mosley, the librarian at St Bride Printing Library in London, took a 1914 Cicero translation and scrambled it to make dummy text for Letraset's Body Type sheets. It has survived not only many decades, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised thanks to these sheets and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker and Microsoft Word including versions of Lorem Ipsum.
Person, Position @ Company:
iLorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since 1966, when designers at Letraset and James Mosley, the librarian at St Bride Printing Library in London, took a 1914 Cicero translation and scrambled it to make dummy text for Letraset's Body Type sheets. It has survived not only many decades, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised thanks to these sheets and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker and Microsoft Word including versions of Lorem Ipsum.
Inn
Sustainable Engineering
Material Design
Art Direction
Brand Identity
Style Guidelines
Packaging
Naming
Voice
Messaging
Every year, Americans flush 2.6 to 2.9 billion contact lenses down the drain. When you consider that number on a global scale and factor in that the scientists in Antartica have started finding micro-plastics in the water, those little discs of plastic have become a big problem. Harnessing the ingenuity of new material science and another valuable ocean resource—seaweed—the world’s first biodegradable contact is in the works. But could we help to make it a truly circular process, shape withstanding?
Naming
Hunting for a name that capitalized on the biodegradable nature of this new product seemed almost too easy. The name pays homage to both nature and man at once, combining the soft sound of the sure-sighted owl and the surname of legendary magician Harry Houdini.
Naturally, many magic and sight-related puns appeared out of thin air and worked their way into the verbal identity of the brand. It’s one of the many ways Hoodini tries to use humor to make a serious issue more approachable.
Visual Identity
Hoodini’s color palette is aquatic in nature and the two main color combinations are both AAA-contrast rating. Why is that so important? 1.3 billion people live with some form of vision impairment. When ordering, customers can check a color-blind option to ensure that all their packaging, brand emails, etc, remain legible.
The ‘OO' formation held many possibilities. At the brand’s discretion, it can be treated like an infinity symbol, a contact case or personified with a pair of ears.
Packaging
All elements of the brand’s packaging would need to be recycled to close the loop. Sourcing recycled boxes and soy inks ensured that most of the ecosystem could be composted, but what could be done to entice users into making sure their empties got recycled? For starters, we designed the shipping box to act as its own recycling vehicle. Punch out the perforated portion, slot discarded cases in, and mail back when full.
Companies like Terracycle create a barrier for users by asking them to seek and drop off their empty vessels at far flung destinations. Hoodini boxes ship with a prepaid label back to the processing plant. Customers are credited for these returns and earn credits towards a tiered reward system that offers discounts for purchases and occasionally a cool prize or two (think bamboo sunglasses and other green swag to keep your peepers in pristine condition).