Selected projects
The following are projects to which I've contributed as a front-end developer. Most of my contributions are on private Git servers, but you can view the public repository for this site on GitHub.
The Rhode Island School of Design
A site system built for one of the most prestigious design schools in the world. Finalist for the 2024 Webby Awards.The New Bagehot Project
Decoupled online platform that allows users to search key interventions throughout history to fight financial crises. Built using a React frontend and a Drupal backend.The New York Senate Website
Open-source Drupal website that allows users to interact with their congressional leaders.Milk Experiment
Science Fiction blog built using a WordPress backend and a React/Gatsby frontend.Hello Recipe
A cooking blog that also pulls in the Edamam recipe search API.UNT Registration Campaign
A creative and art-driven campaign that encourages students to register every semester.Identity Guide
The UNT Identity Guide sets the standard for copy, print, and web branding for the University. It was extremely important that this site serve the useful function of housing over 10,000 university logos, while also upholding the brand and narrative of the University.Web Accessibility Project
The UNT web accessibility project is an ongoing initiative to measurably improve the accessibility, usability, and content of over 400 UNT websites.Favorite Links
This is a constantly-updated list of great external resources for front-end web development. It includes videos, articles, and websites.
Canary in a Coal Mine: How Tech Provides Platforms for Hate
In this article, Tatiana Mac examines the unique usefulness of the web, particularly social media, to breed hate, and what responsibility developers have to address it.
Fluid Type
An approach to type on the web that focuses on the most optimal reading size based on a range of 45-75 words per line.
JavaScript is Coming to Eat You
A Drupal BADCamp 2019 session that focuses on the paradigm shift in web development solutions away from monolithic CMS
Death to Bullshit by Brad Frost
A refreshing meditation on the current state of the web, summed up perfectly by the James Gleick quote, "When information is cheap, attention becomes expensive."