Oktoberfest, meet Oregon. And brand yourself. Actually, let me! Ortoberfest is an event hosted in Mcminnville, Oregon. The event brings together the community to raise money for Mcminnville schools while doing what kids can’t: drinking beer. This year sports a full rebrand for a fresh yet familiar experience.
Portland Bootleg Skateparks is an ongoing project; it is my homage to the skateparks of Multnomah county. When finished, all the skateparks of Portland and its surrounding metro area will be included. Every skatepark has a flipped logo of an actual skate company, a isometric drawing, and an animation to accompany footage of the park.
Currently a work in progress; it is my homage to the skateparks of Portland.Every skatepark has a spoofed logo of an actual skate company. For instance, Benedict Skatepark is a spoof of Birdhouse Skateboards.
When finished, all the skateparks of Portland will have an animated logo bump, accompanied with a coffee table book with info and illustrations.
Dachshunds are badass dogs. They were bred to track and kill badgers; they take little dog syndrome to a new level. Juxtaposing a serious side to them would be memorable and humorous to anyone as they are always portrayed as cute and soft.
National Dachshund Races is a national organization that needs rebranding for a fairly niche dog breed. The dogs were bred to track badgers. Juxtaposing a serious and bold side to them would be memorable/humorous to anyone as they are always portrayed as cute and soft.
Selected speaker cards and title card for Design Week Portland 2017.
An animation for ESPN College Basketball through Lincoln Design Company using existing and custom assets.
Skills Used:
Animation
Illustration
Story Boarding
Logo comps for Foster Weld through Lincoln Design Co.
Illustrations commissioned by Portland State University to use in publications and advertisements.
WWE graphic for Finn Balor through Lincoln Design Co.
The Adobe Creative Jam is a tournament for designers to compete with their skills.
Three hours, two dudes, one prompt: "Human." The result was an animated excerpt from Adrian Mitchell's poem Human Beings.
It won both categories for motion design and I even got the chance to meet Draplin himself; it was a good night.
My submission for the 2016 Adobe Creative Jam Portland, which got first place in both categories: the Judges Award and the People's Choice Award.
HOURLUNCH is a non-profit that aims at collecting donations to fight child hunger. Headed by Anton Cobb, the organization has received much attention from the Portland community and media. The rebrand aimed at showing the difference an hour of your time can make on our community. It aimed at showing what makes HOURLUNCH stand out from the crowd. The brand book below shows this, as well as a new donation experience.
HOURLUNCH is a non-profit that aims at collecting donations to fight child hunger. Headed by Anton Cobb, the organization has received much attention from the Portland community and media. The rebrand aimed at showing the difference an hour of your time can make on our community. It aimed at showing what makes HOURLUNCH stand out from the crowd. The brand book below shows this, as well as a new donation experience.
Working at Portland State has given me the opportunity to help create a welcoming and exciting vibe for new and prospective students. My tasks included branding campus event campaigns, creating print, web and social collateral. Go Vikes!
Portland State Admissions has many programs that help prospective and soon–to–be students feel welcome and at home. I was tasked with creating a cohesive branding structure for the events. Each event has its own branding while they all fall under the same umbrella.
Bridges helps connect at risk high schoolers with PSU. The logo reflects this: the youthful brush type paired with the more structured sans serif.
Illustrative poster and social media campaign aimed at youth in order to garnish more interest in science and math.
The US continues to fall behind in science and math. Math and Science as a brand take the backseat compared to more compelling stories that live in current social media. The idea and aim behind the Brain Explained! campaign is to make science more visually stimulating and appealing–helping engage youth that are living in these digital social settings.