Design: Personal style guide
2018
To get some consistency throughout my personal branding, I made a personal style guide for use on my website, resume, business card etc.
2018
To get some consistency throughout my personal branding, I made a personal style guide for use on my website, resume, business card etc.
2018
Kroon Webdesign asked me to design flyers, coupons and a business card for the car servicing company XOX Car Service. The flyers were based on a template and modified heavily to fit the organization. The other designs were made from scratch.
Inkscape and the GIMP were used to make the business card/coupons and the flyer, respectively.
April-November 2017
I interned at web hosting company CloudResident between May and November of 2017. I created and worked on several different products during my time there.
What I’ve done there
For CloudResident’s brand and website:
2014
This was a college project done for the businesses Océ and BührmannUbbens.
Premise
In a time where the classic envelope and letter are dwindling in popularity, Océ and BührmannUbbens wanted to find new ways to innovate the written letter and to make snail mail a little more attractive to the public again.
Result
In a team of five people, we came up with a concept that allowed a letter to be supplemented by extra content that could be accessed digitally. Examples of this content would be videos, photos, gift cards and presents. This was the result of taking the angle that a letter is considered more classy and personal.
The concept ultimately wasn’t implemented, but it taught me a lot about research, concepting and ideation, as well as creating wireframes and prototypes and working in a team.
Concept pictures:
Prototype website for submitting data:
2014
In college, the entire class had been tasked to create a public-facing website for the specialization we were doing (which was Creative Industries). After the ideation process, where many ideas were thrown around and refined, we had a general idea of what the website was going to feature. I took the task to create wireframes for this new website and implemented any feedback given back to me.
The wireframes were designed responsively: I created website, mobile and tablet views.
The website ended up implementing what was shown on the wireframes quite nicely.
The website is no longer available as each year, the website got replaced by the next batch of students.
2014
My first adventures in responsive web design. Made for a school project Creative Industries. Coded by me, visual design by Sander de Waal. Made from wireframes, which were also sketched out by me, based on features determined by other people in the team. I also worked out the functional design involving these features.
Wireframes and part of the functional design:
Screenshots:
2014
Co-design Studio is a minor I followed in 2014 at the Hogeschool Utrecht.
The focus was on the Design Thinking methodology, the user experience, and user-centered design. In fact, the user is involved as much as possible in the design process, which is very beneficial for the resulting product.
There were several projects involving several companies.
2013
Premise
In the project “Do New Things” (Nieuwe Dingen Doen), the goal is for students to gain practical experience working on a project at a company, while still having available expertise to help them achieve success with the project. Processes include ideation, research, concepting, prototyping and working in teams using the Dutch project development method known as Project Driven Creation.
I worked in a project team of five students for the company Kerckebosch Media, where a cross-media concept was developed. This concept was based around their need to communicate and provide information about their offering of offline events (e.g. organizing debates and readings).
Results
The main products ended up being:
I have mainly contributed to the first and second ideas, developing wireframes, prototypes a functional design and documentation for the two websites.
2013
This was a college project to take a subject on an ongoing trend/technology and explain it to other people.
As the subject I tackled was about the then relatively new HTML5 and WebGL technologies, it was well-received by the teachers, who had been looking into teaching students about the tech. This got my peers more familiar with the terms and their meanings.
Funnily enough, the poster includes idea on using WebGL in Google Maps and Street View in order to enhance their functionality by allowing you to go through the map in free flight. Google, of course, actually ended up implementing WebGL in exactly that fashion in their Google Maps application.
The poster was made using Scribus.
(No, I don’t think the graphic design on this poster is very good these days. But hey, it’s something I did I was proud of at the time, so into the portfolio it goes!)