NEW INTERNET CLUB
New Internet Club is a 6-part publication series that engages the designer as author in conversations about addressing the histories of the internet in relation to contemporary crises and pandemics. Each zine is critically researched and authored to explore digital architectures of the internet—such as search engines, personal websites, and applications—as liminal interventions aimed at creating a new internet that better serves communities and fosters social kinship.
The visual approach draws inspiration from bit-rot, digital decay, and image artifacts from the internet’s past, including gifs, screencaptures, and accidental collaging within the performative screen of the internet.
New Internet Club is risoprinted and coil-bound.
Please email me for a pdf to read my work or borrow zines in person.
The visual approach draws inspiration from bit-rot, digital decay, and image artifacts from the internet’s past, including gifs, screencaptures, and accidental collaging within the performative screen of the internet.
New Internet Club is risoprinted and coil-bound.
Please email me for a pdf to read my work or borrow zines in person.








Emily Carr University of Art + Design
MDES 2021 exhibition poster series
MDES 2021 exhibition poster series
In collaboration with Emily Carr University Master of Design students, we created a series of exhibition posters based on the theme “23 Actions Through Design.” The posters bring together a variety of distinct yet thematically linked actions, highlighting how design can function as a tool for exploration and meaningful impact.
Each poster served as an activation point, placed throughout the city and on campus, where the public could scan a QR code to access more information about individual student projects.
I designed and risograph printed the posters in collaboration with The Stationery Project, using a set of curated color combinations to maintain cohesion across the broader series.
Each poster served as an activation point, placed throughout the city and on campus, where the public could scan a QR code to access more information about individual student projects.
I designed and risograph printed the posters in collaboration with The Stationery Project, using a set of curated color combinations to maintain cohesion across the broader series.



Asian Community Convener Project
The Asian Community Convener Project is a report created for the nonprofit organization Hua Foundation. It captures insights from Asian community leaders across the province, highlighting their approaches to community building, their capacities to address anti-racism, and the support structures needed for their continued growth and impact.
Rooted in the themes of learning, cooking, and communal sharing, the project metaphorically frames the report as a feast of ideas. I illustrated and typeset the essays and interviews into a cohesive, thoughtfully designed publication that functions as both a report and a catalog—meant to nourish reflection and inspire action.
This project can be read at Hua Foundation’s website.
Rooted in the themes of learning, cooking, and communal sharing, the project metaphorically frames the report as a feast of ideas. I illustrated and typeset the essays and interviews into a cohesive, thoughtfully designed publication that functions as both a report and a catalog—meant to nourish reflection and inspire action.
This project can be read at Hua Foundation’s website.





