January 27, 2018Comments are off for this post.

Links I Love / 19

There've been a few major things on my life bucket list over the years:

Be on the Price Is Right and give Bob Barker a cheek kiss. Start my own Babysitter's Club (Claudia Kishi 4 lyfe). Watch figure skating live at the Winter Olympics.

While the first two never came to childhood fruition, the third is finally happening.

In less than a week and a half, I leave for South Korea! My friend's brother-in-law is the reigning silver medalist in skeleton (which I'm fairly certain makes me an Olympic medalist by association), so we're going to cheer Matt on, eat our weight in kimchi and stalk Johnny Weir. I'm not sure which one I'm most excited about.

That means I've been laying low and working like a fiend all month in preparation for the big trip. No social media, no booze, lots of yoga, lots of designing. I've also made more time for reading — both books and web — which has lead to this lovely and completely random list of links.

See y'all in South Korea for soju, noraebang 노래방 (karaoke) and a whole lot of Gangnam dancing.


Tomorrow's breakfast.

I'd like to stuff my face with this Yotom Ottolenghi three-course feast.

This is more important.

I need to visit this Wes Anderson-inspired café immediately.

I've become weirdly obsessed with learning about cryptocurrency. This is the best, unbiased article I've found.

Why you should quit social media.

My Year of No Shopping.

Six fairy tales for the modern woman. (via Cup of Jo)

Finished A Little Life. It's the most impactful book I've read in a long time (warning: also very sad).

It's Oscar season! I, Tonya was so good, and if you haven't seen Call Me By Your Name yet, go now. The monologue at the end of the movie is so touching.

My all-time fave Oscar looks: Lauren Hutton ('75) & Michelle Williams ('06).

Frances McDormand, for the win. (Also, her thoughts on aging.)

January 10, 2018Comments are off for this post.

2017 / Year In Review

It's 2018.

That fact is crazy to me because (a) I swear I was just sporting an Abercrombie zip-up jacket and frosted sparkly eyeshadow on New Year's Eve 1999 fearing the impending apocalypse of Y2K, and (b) it means I've officially been a self-employed designer for more than three years now.

Three years! And yet, I still feel so new to design. Always learning, always trying to pay attention, always discovering what I want to communicate to you — and to this crazy world — with my work. It's perhaps the reason why I'm terrible about actually showing my work. I often still feel like that self-conscious, uses-too-many-Photoshop-filters design student constantly wondering, "Am I good enough for this?"

Because of these lingering feelings, I'm dedicating myself to showing up.

Again and again and again.

It's only by doing and sharing my work that I'll grow and progress as a designer. Also, it turns out I need clients to pay my bills and showing my work helps ensure I can afford those expensive jars of tahini and packs of sparkling water I love so much.

Enjoy this sampling of my 2017 design work. There was a lot of branding, typography and lettering. My first real packaging! A bit of web design. A first foray into animation. And I'm never not wishing for more print projects — did you hear that, 2018?

A huge thank you to all my lovely clients for entrusting me so generously with your businesses, ideas and friendship. You the best.

December 13, 2017Comments are off for this post.

Links I Love / 18

And just like that, it's December.

I've been trying to slow things down this month in an attempt to truly appreciate the season. Holiday markets, Christmas movies (mainly of the Hallmark variety, guilty as charged) and concerts, arts & crafts with lady friends, cookie baking and happy hours at holiday cocktail pop-up bars. This year, I am nothing if not festive as hell.

I've been sleeping in more, reading more, relaxing more, taking more breaks. It's been just the thing for this magical if not stressful/chaotic/demanding time of year.

That means I've also had extra time to compile a seriously jam-packed list of links for you. If you're able to carve out time in your busy schedule, then have at them & enjoy. There's something about the month of December — teetering on the precipice of a brand new year — that's seems fitting for rest, relaxation and reflection.

With that, I'll most likely disappear from here until the new year when I'll be one year older and hoping, a whole lot wiser. (I'm beginning to think adulthood is one ceaseless cycle of thinking you know what you're doing only to realize you've not a damn clue).

May your days be merry, bright and festive as hell, just like mine.

Also 2018, please redeem us all from 2017 & 2016. K thanks bye.

“The best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear.” Buddy the Elf


A delicious holiday cheese board.

60+ minimalist holiday traditions. (Love #1 & #6 of things to do by yourself.)

This movie was all sorts of lovely.

Apparently, I'm on a women-only documentary kick: Amy, The Center Will Not Hold and What Happened Miss Simone? All are more than worthy of a watch.

Best productivity advice (via Cup of Jo).

This podcast is next on my to-listen list.

I love this letterpress print.

An argument for skipping adult presents at the holidays. I'm totally in (via Becoming Minimalist).

Speaking of, our relentless consumption is trashing the planet.

100 notable books of 2017.

Wise words.

Is there something odd about being single? "To call the unmarried “lonely” is to pretend marriage confers companionship, not merely a set of privileges historically reserved for long-term companions. But the longer I have been single, the more I have devoted myself to companionship in the form of close friendships that enrich my life. Thriving as a single person doesn’t challenge conventions of gender or sexuality, but it does contest the notion that romantic partnerships must take precedence over other relationships."

LOLOLOL.