This is a playful piece that is a visual illustration of the word meathammer (a kitchen utensil used for tenderizing raw meats.) The paradox of what is expected and what is shown helps to break monotony and create interest.
This is a poster for the restaurant Chili's and it's partnership with St. Jude's Children's Hospital. It uses the symmetry of the peppers and the unity of texture to create a synergistic feel to the partnership of the two companies as they raised money for sick children.
This is a sample of some playfulness with the medium of typography. The arrangement of letters gives them a feel of an amorphous shape rather than the same palled forms that we see every day. This reorganizes the concepts of space layout with the use the greek letter Omega.
This ad for The City of Pensacola helps exhibit the use of my photography in integration with my design work. The earthy tones in the shapes help reinforce the graphic. The use of shapes with lowered transparencies give a full feeling to a sparse piece.
This is a poster made for Earth Day that heavily relies on texture for visual stimulation and symmetry for ease of viewing. The simplicity and lack of copy are aimed at giving direct impact to the viewer.
Here is an ad for Jeep that is both suggestive of a luxurious quality to the product and also a sense of adventure that entails ownership. The dark red hue adds a sense of importance and quality as well as providing a subtle sense of power.
This is a small sampling of some of the icons I designed in the fall of 2010 for The Office of Environmental Sustainability at the University of West Florida. The objective was to be able to integrate imagery into a "green" campaign for the office in order to heighten its profile among students and faculty.
These are two illustrations of the recording artist Tom Waits.
I used a pen and tablet for the lines and played with scanned textures to create a sense of the artist. The idea is to convey a feeling of something foreign and eroded.
This is a redesign of Stephen King's book series The Dark Tower. It focuses on texture and a warm color pallet to translate the intensity of the book. The iconic revolver shape also lends a hand in illustrating the theme of aggression and power.