About
I'm a designer and developer who believes in the power of thoughtful creation. This digital garden is where I explore ideas, share discoveries, and document the ongoing experiment of making things that matter.
Story
My journey started with curiosity about how things work. As a kid, I took apart radios and tried to rebuild them (with mixed success). That same impulse drives me today—whether I'm designing interfaces, writing code, or sketching ideas on paper.
I've spent years at the intersection of design and technology, working with startups and established companies to build products that people actually want to use. But beyond the professional work, I'm drawn to the craft itself—the satisfaction of solving problems elegantly and the joy of continuous learning.
When I'm not at the computer, you'll find me sketching in coffee shops, reading about everything from cognitive science to urban planning, or experimenting with new creative mediums. I believe the best digital work comes from a rich offline life.
Principles
Taking time to do things well, even when the world demands everything yesterday.
Sharing the messy process of growth, not just the polished outcomes.
Choosing intention over impulse in how we engage with technology.
Approaching problems with genuine interest rather than predetermined solutions.
Tool Stack
Design & Creative
Development
Tools & Workflow
Learning
Side Quests
Beyond the main quest of design and development, I'm always pursuing various side interests:
- Urban sketching — Capturing city life with pen and watercolor
- Analog photography — Slowing down with film cameras
- Coffee brewing — The daily ritual of pour-over perfection
- Bookbinding — Creating physical objects in a digital world
- Language learning — Currently working on Italian
Colophon
This site is built with Next.js and styled with Tailwind CSS. Typography is set in Geist Sans and Geist Mono. The design emphasizes readability, accessibility, and performance over flashy effects.
All content is written by me unless otherwise noted. The code is available on GitHub for those interested in the technical implementation.
This site is intentionally not indexed by search engines—it's a personal space for exploration and growth, not optimization for discovery.