(Front of the) front end development

I enjoy bridging the gap between design and development and ensuring the products I help build are semantic, accessible and robust yet also have beautiful interactive experiences. Most of these were built while I was working at Humaan.

A screenshot of the Sodashi homepage
An elegant e-commerce site built on the Magento platform

Sodashi

Sodashi is an elegant e-commerce site with subtle and buttery-smooth animation. These kinds of sites take ages to build!

Visit Sodashi

A screenshot of the Mideast Tunes Radio homepage
Building right-to-left reading websites is a mind bending exercise.

Mideast Tunes Radio

Mideast Tunes Radio is a hub for podcasts created by Mideast Tunes, a platform to discover underground musicians in the Middle East and North Africa. Being bi-lingual (Arabic and English) meant I needed to accommodate for both left-to-right and right-to-left layouts.

Visit Mideast Tunes Radio

A screenshot of the Onia homepage
Looping keyframe animation bought this site to life.

Onia

Onia are specialist orthodontists. This site has a tonne of playful animation which made for a fun and challenging build.

Visit Onia

A screenshot of the Paris American Academy homepage
Quirky grids and an editorial aesthetic made this a challenging build.

Paris American Academy

Paris American Academy is a fashion design school in Paris. This site features a fullscreen editorial style with really interesting grid layouts.

Visit Paris American Academy

A screenshot of the Landscape Elements homepage
An accessible site with layers on finesse on top.

Landscape Elements

Landscape Elements Pty Ltd are specialist landscapers. This was a freelance project of mine and although full of animated UI (perhaps too full!), at the core it is a considered accessible experience.

Visit Landscape Elements