Marketing Materials
Electrical Training Seminar Brochure
For this brochure marketing instructor-led electrical training seminars, I focused on clarity and impact. Using bold colors to catch the eye, the layout remains conservative and professional, keeping the design approachable and organized. Course descriptions and discussion topics are presented in a clean, easy-to-read format, allowing readers to quickly grasp what’s offered without feeling overwhelmed.


One-Page Brochures
I designed a series of one-page brochures aimed at diversifying their training offerings and highlighting their foray into online and digital technology. The challenge was to maintain the brand’s strong reputation for in-person training while making the new formats feel just as credible and engaging. I focused on clean layouts and clear visuals to make the information easy to scan, while using design cues that communicated innovation and accessibility. The result was a set of brochures that helped position TPC as forward-thinking and adaptable, showing clients that their expertise could now extend beyond the classroom.


PowerPoint Presentations
I’ve created PowerPoint presentations that combine clear storytelling with strong visual design, turning slides into tools that actually engage instead of overwhelm. My focus is always on clean layouts, consistent branding, and visuals that support the message rather than distract from it. Whether for training, marketing, or executive meetings, I’ve built presentations that make complex ideas easy to follow and memorable for the audience.
Software Engineering Studios
For an opening 3D animation, I drew inspiration from classic sci-fi like Flash Gordon and vintage space adventures, imagining rockets and planets on strings to give it that playful, retro-futuristic vibe. The animation features exhaust smoke that constantly drifts upward, while grainy, slightly broken footage textures give it the feel of an old film reel. The result blends nostalgia with a modern 3D aesthetic.


Kung Fu & Tai Chi
Yes, I understand, this is old-school: they don't design websites like this anymore—and for good reason! But early in my design career, one of the standout experiences was creating a website for an Olympian martial artist. Designing for someone at that level pushed me to think bigger, move faster, and stretch what I believed was "professional". It was a time of pure excitement, where the inspiration was constant, and every design felt like it mattered.

