Skateboards for Killing Time Skateboards, Irish Skate brand.


For Christmas 2023 created a bespoke gift box for Whiplash Beer. Breathing in Stereo West Coast IPA, featuring an all over foil print, new Whiplash tote bag and a collection of 4 mini risograph prints.


 Can artwork design for Whiplash Beer for their range of Lager. Using a selection of motifs that link them all together.


Shirts for Killing Time Skateboards, Irish Skate brand.


I had the pleasure of designing this Cycle Syncing Calendar for Silverbough Studio. Cycle Syncing is a method of aligning your lifestyle with the different stages of your menstrual cycle - this calendar has 4 prints; one for each phase.
This is a desk or bed-side calendar to help you connect with your menstrual cycle. Understanding your cycle and being in sync with your personal rhythm can benefit hormonal balance, fertility, and emotional well-being.


Deep Water tells a personal story of struggling with mental health, capturing feelings of balance, fluidity and power through manipulation of photographs of the sea.

Deep Water is a collaborative work between myself and Damn Fine Press. Four months in the making and was being released on November 21st 2019.
Using 35mm photographs & layering process of different colours, to manipulate the colour spectrum of process printing, with a distinctive textural quality of soy-based risograph inks, & a hand screen printed cover.

Risograph printed on Munken Lynx paper and tracing paper. Cover screen printed on Woodstock Cipria paper. Printed using Black, Medium Blue and Fluorescent Pink inks.

Available at Damn Fine Print.com.


These large cyanotype prints are now installed in the Meta (Facebook) building in Sunnyvale San Francisco as part of the Artist-in-Residence program.

Holding explores nature and a feeling of stillness, capturing the beauty of wild flowers through this print process to elicit an emotional connection and allow the viewer time and space to reflect. The name refers to this moment of stillness and holding nature in reverence. Each piece of fabric lifts the wildflowers from the ground and into view. The deep blues created in the fabric prints result from an old photographic printing process called Cyanotype. The process uses two chemicals that mix together become photo-sensitive and produce a cyan-blue print when exposed to UV light. The fabric is first soaked in the chemicals, let them dry and then the designs are exposed for a tested duration to achieve these rich blue tints.