A bit about me…
I'm driven by the belief that the best product design lives at the intersection of empathy, craft, & clarity
Based in
Las Vegas, NV
Experience
9+ years

Background
Over the past 9+ I've designed experiences that simplify complex decisions and turn them into intuitive, human-centered interactions. Most recently I focused on home search, helping buyers navigate one of life's most emotional decisions: finding a place to call home.
What drives my work most is understanding the emotional side of product experiences. How people process information, what builds trust, and how thoughtful design can reduce overwhelm and help users make confident decisions. I'm drawn to the messy, ambiguous problems where research, systems thinking, and storytelling have to come together before anything makes sense.
How I work
I collaborate closely with PMs and engineers, using prototyping, research, and iteration to explore solutions and guide teams toward the strongest outcomes. Colleagues describe me as someone who elevates the quality of work around them, bringing a strong eye for detail, openness to feedback, and a calm, collaborative presence to every project.
At the core of how I design is emotional design. The belief that every product operates on three levels simultaneously: how it looks and feels at first glance, how well it works in practice, and what it means to the person using it over time. I think about all three. A feature that functions perfectly but creates overwhelm hasn't done its job. A beautiful interface that leaves someone more confused than when they started has missed the point entirely.


Philosophy
I believe emotion is the interface between humans and experience.
My approach to design is inspired by the Japanese philosophy of Kodawari, a quiet dedication to craftsmanship and thoughtful detail. It’s the idea that even the smallest decisions matter, because they shape how people feel when they interact with something.
Most people make things. I ask why this exists, how it feels, and what it says about the human experience. That question is what drives every decision I make.
Outside of work
When I’m not designing, you’ll probably find me being cozy with my cats, at comedy shows, concerts and festivals, photographing places, and moments that evoke emotion, or enjoying the quiet rhythm of morning coffee rituals with some smooth jazz or lo-fi playing in the background.

Open to new opportunities
