somewhere in progress

SOMEWHERE INPROGRESS

dreaming louder every year.

closer now

I keep coming back to the same quiet question: what does this make someone feel?

Not as a slogan. More like a habit. The thing I notice after the first impression has gone quiet.

I like people who pay attention. To tone. To timing. To the little shift in someone's face when a room finally feels safe enough to be honest.

That is the kind of technology I want to make too. Calm when the world is loud. Elegant without performing. Human enough to leave space for whoever arrives here next.

people remember feelings first.

still redesigning.

small details matter.

quiet systems.

Projects

Things I kept thinking about.

Not a gallery of outcomes. More like rooms left open: places where care, curiosity, failure, and technology kept circling the same human questions.

keep going, softly.

01 / care systems

Helping recovery feel less lonely.

Gamified rehabilitation system using motion sensors and gesture tracking.

I became obsessed with how encouragement changes consistency. I wanted recovery to feel less clinical and more human, like someone was quietly noticing the effort.

encouragement changes the body differently.

Motion sensorsGesture trackingRehab UXFeedback loops

somewhere between streetlight and memory.

02 / cinematic mapping

Turning places into emotional coordinates.

A travel journal experiment for saving atmosphere, not just locations.

Maps usually remember where you went. I kept wondering what it would look like if they remembered how a place held you for a moment.

some cities become weather inside you.

NYCPhotographySpatial memoryPersonal archives

technology should feel human.

03 / calm technology

Making interfaces that lower the temperature.

Interaction studies for tools that feel calm, elegant, and emotionally aware.

I keep returning to the same design problem: how do you make technology useful without making people feel managed by it?

quiet systems can still be powerful.

Interaction designMotion languageAI-ready systemsHuman tools