Most projects start with understanding the business first, then building the brand system or web presence around that reality. Just clear, functional design that serves the actual purpose.
I adhere to the "just enough research" ethos — whip up a prototype as quick as possible for us to collaborate around.
Explore what I doI don’t think it’s a shocker, but as a designer, I hate accounting. I do mine quarterly, and each time it has been a day-long torture session of matching receipts to bank statements. Now it’s an hour-long breeze with a 70% accuracy rate. Here’s how I built an app to sniff out and match invoices with bank statements.
WeTransfer links expire. Clients lose download emails. I spend hours re-uploading and re-emailing the same photos. Sound familiar? Here’s how I built a custom image bank that eliminated this particular form of time waste.
Let’s rewind a bit. Once you draft your first app with ai, you face a crucial decision: where should it live and be built? Think of it as choosing between cooking your own food and hiring a catering service. Both get you fed, but the choice shapes your entire relationship with your creation.
I cook a lot, bake a lot. Thus I spend a lot of time with a calculator, scaling recipes up and down. Until one Saturday morning when I realized – why am I doing this math shit when I could be building an app for it?
Before you can cook up your first custom app, you need to do some digital mise en place and get your head around the surprisingly simple tools and ingredients that make up any application.
Just a few months ago, I was drowning in repetitive business tasks. Today, I’ve built a suite of custom apps that I use to run my freelance business almost on autopilot. Here’s how to scale your one-man-business with Ai.
After 2–3 years of quiet development, I’m really excited to get back into actively developing Skrivr!
Out of the blue, I got a call from a friend. They needed marketing and branding material for a stirrup they were prototyping. Everyone who tried it said this product would be something totally new and might go far. I said «Yes», packed my gear, got in the car, and drove off to the island of Gotland … but I had severe doubts about this.
I spent three days in the Swedish and Norweigan mountains to shoot some of the best bicyclists in Sweden. Here are the behind the scenes.
Whether it's a brand refresh, a product redesign, or a second opinion on a technical solution — let's talk.