My showcase of creative detours because side quests > main storyline
This is where my curiosity turns into side projects that let me explore new tools, technologies, and creative rabbit holes — somewhere between inspiration, experimentation, and avoiding sleep.
I wanted a way to map the moments that shaped me through an interactive life journal. Inspired by the idea that life moves in waves, with every moment leaving its own shape on your story.

I love a cute, cozy aesthetic, so I wanted to create a sticker-based app where I could quickly capture activities, events, or habits I care about. It's built as a complete design system, with the Figma file available on the Figma Community, and the progressive web app is free to install and use on your mobile phone.
I built Token Auditor after noticing I was repeatedly doing ‘design system hygiene’ checks with Claude. The plugin audits semantic token readability for AI workflows by automatically checking variables, flagging potential logic issues as pass, warn, or fail, and generating a detailed HTML report. It also helps designers keep variables consistent across designs by providing clear rules and guidance for colours, spacing, and token usage.
3D Prints
Functional objects designed in Tinkercad and printed on my 3d printer. Drag to rotate, scroll to zoom.

My walking pad's phone stand never had enough space for both my device and the remote, so I designed a small slide-on holder that clips neatly onto the edge of the stand. Now the remote has its own dedicated spot, my phone or tablet fits properly, and I no longer have to awkwardly carry the remote in my pocket while walking.

My bin never had a pedal or proper handle, so I was constantly fumbling around the edge of the lid trying to lift it open. I designed a curved slip-on handle that hooks neatly onto the lip of the lid, making it easier to find, more comfortable to grip, and a little nicer to look at too.

My desk lamp had an overly long cable that always looked messy, and the switch ended up too far away to reach comfortably. I designed a small desk-mounted cable holder that slips onto the edge of the desk, letting me neatly wind the excess cable while bringing the switch closer to the lamp and easier to find.

