I'm a generalist by nature, working across UX, UI, interaction, motion, and brand depending on what the project calls for. I also like staying close to the build, because that's where ideas get tested, shaped, and made real. For me, craft lives in that overlap, where thinking and making sharpen each other.
I am a Product Designer based in Vancouver, Canada.
Over the past decade, I've designed digital products across web, mobile, and immersive platforms, from traditional 2D products to spatial 3D experiences.
I started with 5 years designing healthcare products, which shaped my sensitivity to usability, clarity, and human-centered systems.
Later, at Unity and Capgemini Engineering, I worked on Mixed Reality (MR) and Digital Twin applications for complex real-world environments, helping bridge user needs, system logic, and technical implementation.
Most recently, I've been contributing to a confidential city-scale digital twin for World Cup operations and urban management, combining AI-driven systems with real-time operational data.
My practice started on screens, mobile, web, desktop, and has grown into spatial and 3D environments. As the context changes, so does the way I think, design, and build. What I make is no longer limited to a single surface, and that shift keeps expanding both my practice and my perspective.
AI tools like Claude Code has changed what one designer can do. It's made it easier for me to go deeper in areas I once only touched lightly, and to move across design and build with more speed and confidence. My range is wider, my ambition is bigger, and I still feel like I'm only getting started.
These are the AI tools I use across all three β for thinking, creating, and building. Domain-specific ones are listed within each section.
Pen & Paper
Figma
Paper
Google AI Studio
Stitch
Variant
Replit
Rive
Framer
WebflowI work in technology, so I'm constantly thinking about the relationship between innovation and everyday life. I care about how new tools shape the way we live, work, and connect, and how technology can make life feel more human, thoughtful, and meaningful.
At the same time, part of me looks in the opposite direction. I'm deeply drawn to Classical Chinese Medicine and the philosophy around it. What resonates with me is the idea that we are not separate from nature, but part of a larger pattern, always moving in relation to forces bigger than ourselves.
Technology moves fast, but I believe there is just as much value in learning from older forms of wisdom. They carry a different kind of intelligence, one rooted in what remains true even as everything else evolves. If innovation is about what is possible, tradition can remind us what is essential.
Lately, I've been exploring a few ideas around Acupuncture and the I-Ching , looking at how these ancient systems might be translated into contemporary digital experiences. Some of these are still early experiments, including a few small demos I made through vibe coding.
Living in Vancouver also keeps me close to nature. Outside of work, I love hiking and exploring the outdoors. Nature helps me slow down, reset, and stay curious. There is always something new to notice, and that sense of discovery reminds me how limited my own understanding still is. It keeps me grounded while also connecting me to something larger than myself.








