I worked closely with John Saddington (human3rror) to develop the ChurchCrunch branding and build a unique, highly flexible WordPress theme that will be the foundation for every new blog in the 8BIT Network. I designed the UI and developed the front-end, then helped troubleshoot the launch as John integrated the theme into their existing website.

After launching the AllDevJobs.com Blog, I decided it would be a heck of a lot more fun to give away a copy of Things for Mac to 5 lucky email subscribers. To read the details and enter the contest, please visit the new AllDevJobs.com Blog.
I designed the website for the 8BIT Network and coded the HTML/CSS/JS along with a custom WordPress theme that allows nearly unlimited customization of the content. Unique qualities about this design are the HTML5 doctype, 30px baseline grid and custom 9-column grid and inline labels for the contact form.
Lift is my newly established user experience design firm. We digitally craft brands, websites, and applications. For the Lift website, I designed the logo, website, wrote the front-end code and back-end PHP for custom WordPress theme with full portfolio management backend.
Designmoo is a digg-style website that designers can use to share links to resources and inspiration with peers. Built on Drupal and powered by Drigg, I designed the site and maintain it on a daily basis, frequently digging into code and working with various Drupal modules.
AllDevJobs.com is a design and development job site powered by open-source software, Jobberbase. It connects job seekers with employers and is definitely one of the prettiest job boards in its class. The site utilizes some nifty CSS3 and AJAX-powered search to enhance functionality for job seekers.
On my personal site, I wanted to showcase all the different sections it has while still keeping things relatively simple. The homepage includes a featured item, three columns that share my latest WordPress themes, blog entries, and portfolio entries, and a footer that provides some of my friends’ sites, bookmarks and some other stuff mixed in.
With the need for a variety of business materials for the recently founded Lift, a user experience design company, I designed the business cards, along with our proposal template and other branding pieces for the company. The new business cards have a professional look, with a touch of playfulness in the titles we added for each person. My second title of “Semi-Pro Wakeboarder” is more of a dream than a reality, but I wanted to include something I can see myself doing if I had the opportunity.