Gallery
Evolution of Communication:Timeline Infographic
This infographic visualizes key milestones in long-distance communication, moving from ancient methods (carrier pigeons and smoke signals) through early electrical systems (telegraph and telephone), to modern technologies (two-way radio, ARPANET, and smartphones). The layout follows a flowing path timeline with clearly labeled dates and short, accessible descriptions to guide the viewer through each era.
I designed the piece with an emphasis on strong hierarchy and proximity grouping, pairing each illustration with its corresponding headline, date marker, and explanatory copy for quick scanning. A limited, consistent color palette and bold, simplified vector illustrations create visual unity while helping each communication method stand out. This project demonstrates my ability to translate historical/technical information into a clear, engaging visual narrative suitable for editorial, educational, or web use.
Mountains themes and variations
A collection of mountain illustrations reimagined through different styles and design principles. From Art Deco and Bauhaus to Constructivism, Cubism, Pop Art, and Surrealism. Each piece explores how one subject can transform through color, form, and perspective, showing the power of variation in art and design
Portraits of Jules Winnfield
A color-theory study exploring how different palettes change the mood of the same illustration. Each version of this Jules Winnfield portrait uses a unique harmony—analogous, split-complementary, double-complementary, and low-key. Created in Adobe Illustrator as part of my ongoing digital illustration and color-theory practice.
Sugar skulls and balance
This design was inspired by the ofrendas (offerings) placed on Día de Muertos altars. Decorated with skulls, candles, papel picado, and flowers to honor loved ones who have passed. The composition uses informal balance, arranging the elements asymmetrically to capture the natural variety and rhythm of a real ofrenda. Created in Illustrator and textured in Photoshop for a handmade papel effect.
Digital Sketches
These are a series of digital sketches inspired from the book How to Draw Anything.
T-800 Arm: Functional CAD Rebuild in Creo Parametric
This project is a CAD recreation of the T-800 (Terminator) robotic arm, modeled and assembled in Creo Parametric. The final assembly is built from multiple subassemblies and includes 100+ individual parts, designed to reflect the layered mechanical complexity of the original concept while maintaining clean, manufacturable geometry.
Originally conceived as a static display, I redesigned key components to introduce functional articulation. Specifically enabling wrist and finger movement through revised joint geometry and hardware interfaces. To support the full build, I produced fully dimensioned, labeled part drawings for every component and generated all rendered visuals shown in the gallery, including detailed part studies and exploded assembly views.