Music has always been my background noise and my biggest influence. I design the way I listen: chasing rhythm, layering textures, and building tension before a big drop. From Halsey’s raw edge to Olivia Rodrigo’s angst and Twenty One Pilots’ restless energy, the artists I love fuel the way I think about storytelling. Their sounds translate into the colors I reach for, the type I distort, and the layouts I break apart and rebuild. Music doesn’t just sit in my headphones — it bleeds into how I construct worlds, how I balance chaos and clarity, and how I build design that feels alive rather than static.

This playlist is part mood board and part time capsule. It shifts with what I’m listening to now, but the through-line stays the same: music drives my creativity. The projects that follow are my tracklist—posters, brand worlds, and visuals born from the same energy. Press play, then scroll through the work that soundtracks my design practice. Each piece is its own song, but together they play like an album — one that’s constantly evolving with me.

Ashley by Halsey

Restless, unfiltered, and aching with self-reflection, “Ashley” hits like a confession set to a beat. The poster channels that same vulnerability and raw edge — bold type nearly swallowing the figure, textures that feel torn and imperfect, and a mood that lives between chaos and control. It’s design as catharsis, echoing Halsey’s willingness to put it all out there.

Backslide by Twenty-One Pilots

“Backslide” thrums with uneasy rhythm — a song about momentum stuttered, about slipping when you thought you’d moved forward. The poster mirrors that tension: fractured type, distressed overlays, and a sense of motion that never quite lands. It’s restless by design, reflecting the push-and-pull energy that makes Twenty One Pilots feel both jagged and strangely hopeful.