Overdot was a line of open-ended adaptable jewelry designed and made in New York from 2009-2013.
The pieces, made of simple materials like brass and leather, permuted into multiple forms with simple actions like telescoping, and sold at retailers including Totokaelo, OAK, and Project No. 8.
2016. Varied edition of 12 unique moiré screenprints produced in collaboration with Fernwey Editions.
Color studies analyzing color data from 1000 of the most dominant colors in 100 images.
The Bias Light is a geometric wooden LED light that can inhabit space in multiple ways. It invites the user to invent new possible lives for it: leaning against a wall, sitting on the floor, spanning a corner.
Folding leather box with cast bronze buckle.
Lunar is a fabric screen that cinematically reveals itself in movement. The ceiling-mounted panels can be installed to divide space or provide subtle modulation of light.
Exhibited as part of SAIC Whatnot collection at Spazio Rossana Orlandi in Milan during Salone del Mobile 2015. Images courtesy Jonathan Allen.
Wooden baby rattle
Freestanding mirror with independently pivoting planes and marble base.
Developed in collaboration with CB2, 2014.
Paradox is a set of three steel nesting tables that can be pulled apart to form a graphic configuration.
Produced in collaboration with CB2 and featured in the New York Times, Architectural Digest, Surface Magazine, Refinery 29, and Architect Magazine.
Terracotta vessels, 2014
Based on a color study of photographs taken on a trip to Iceland, the textile's vibrant hues are a distillation of the strong vitality and calm experienced in the landscape itself.
Produced in collaboration with CB2 and featured in Architectural Digest.
CNC milling studies of the same geometry on multiple materials: honeycomb cardboard, beeswax, plywood, blue foam, and cork.
Based on a book of electrical wiring diagrams from the 1950s, these silk textiles translate an abstracted representation of a physically existing network to a graphic application.