Created for Motta Films
Graphic created for Amy Poehler's Smart Girls
Graphic created for Amy Poehler's Smart Girls
Designed for Amy Poehler's Smart Girls
Graphic created for Amy Poehler's Smart Girls
Graphic created for Amy Poehler's Smart Girls
Graphic created for Amy Poehler's Smart Girls
This phrase was arranged, photographed, and left in a park in New York City to serve as a reminder to anyone who came across it to take a step back and appreciate the beauty of life
Assortment of projects as Frederator's graphic designer.
Hand-lettered Frederator Holiday poster
Prop and set designed and created by Ambar Del Moral
Animation and sound by Nicholas Fung
Poster design by Ambar Del Moral
Bee and Puppycat illustration by Charis Jackson Barrios
Poster designed to display information about the animated short, Manly
The Network Map infographic displays the locations of the first 500 members of the Channel Frederator Network
Designed the Bee and Puppycat Sticker pack for Facebook
Handmade logo created for Go! Cartoons
Variation logo created for StashRiot's Frederator Shop
Gif created for the Cartoon Hangover Giphy profile
Estrela is a typeface purely based upon constellations in the night sky. Each letter is derived from a constellation. Some of the connections between stars were removed; however all the main stars are shown and no connections were added.
For more information visit:
http://www.fridayfonts.com/?works=estrela
Book cover typography design for M.T. Anderson's He Laughed with His Other Mouths
Book cover designed to portray two short stories:
Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? by Joyce Carol Oates and The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Layout designed to portray two short stories:
Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? by Joyce Carol Oates and The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
The stories have been integrated in one layout. The The Yellow Wallpaper on the right side on the page and Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? is on the left side of the page
This is a modern take on General Mill's 1978 cereal, Yummy Mummy. This design includes the box, stickers, and a toy premium.
The poster is inspired by the ubiquity of Helvetica. The letters are formed by photos of Helvetica signs found throughout New York City. The small text in the poster are words that describe Helvetica according to graphic designers.