Create, Create, Create and Create.




Currently experimenting with Gen- AI tools as a medium of prototyping. Checking if they have a real place in my design workflow. So far, I’m loving being able to turn ideas into real applications with the intention of making tech fun again :)

See my journey on  



Days In Color

Imagine if you could view your month in color. A mobile documentation application that allows you to document days in color with each color representing a different feeling.

Built with Cursor and XCode



What-do-I-wear-today-?

An application that let’s you upload pictures of your clothes so you can mix and match to see what goes well.

Very much inspired by the nostalgia behind early 2010s dress up games.

Built with V0 by Vercel



Hover Translator

Exploring a different way of translating text using the hover interaction. 

Built with V0 by Vercel



Here’s my two cents!

Define requirements early
AI tools can easily drift or hallucinate. Laying out clear product requirements upfront makes sure outputs stay aligned with actual needs.

Prompt quality matters
How you ask, shapes what you get. A vague prompt like “make it polished” produces very different results from a precise one like “use a serif font and soften the card corners.” The more specific, the more usable the output.

Functionality before aesthetics
It’s tempting to jump straight into making things look beautiful, but ensuring functionality first saves frustration later. I’ve noticed that small visual tweaks can sometimes cause weird changes, so getting the core working right matters most.

Accessibility needs advocacy
AI rarely prioritizes accessibility unless you explicitly remind it. Designers and developers have to keep pushing for inclusive solutions.