The arts-collective-turned-record-label decided that its transition deserved a more functional webpage and a unified brand identity. I built them a Drupal-backed website including integrated store (digital/physical distro), blog, artist roster, and calendar.
Hot Congress
Paul Osbon manages Austin-based rock band Quiet Company. Beyond 100% control over the site's content, Paul needed the site to act as a centralized hub for QC's fans, integrating its vast social networking presence with engaging functionality on the site itself.
Quiet Company
Under contract by the Open Media Foundation, I was asked to develop the framework and functionality for the Colorado Virtual Library's website redesign and overhaul. I developed and themed the design and functionality for all primary, secondary, and tertiary pages.
Colorado Virtual Library
This Rochester-based photographer wanted a no-hassle portfolio where she could direct potential clients with basic, watermark-free measures to deter customers from using her photos without permission.
Sarah Peterson
Watercourse asked Kinsey Hamilton and I for two things: to realign their site's aesthetic with their restaurant, and to allow every aspect of their website to be in their control. Kinsey provided the design and I built it around Drupal, giving them full control over their menu, updates, pages, store, image gallery, etc.
Watercourse
The Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries approached Kinsey Hamilton and I with the opportunity to rebrand Prospector, a unified catalog of over 26 million books in the Rocky Mountain region. We provided them with a dynamic landing page and a simple Wordpress-backed website to handle news content and pages.
Prospector
Tome is a music blog based in Denver, CO and Salt Lake City, UT. Tired of publishing on a Blogspot site for over a year, they asked Kinsey Hamilton and I to provide a sleek new look and CMS. Primary features include full review archive and audio streaming functionality.
Visit Tome to the Weather Machine
Tome to the Weather Machine
I thought it would be interesting to see how often you could find haikus (5-7-5 syllables) in text that was never meant to be interpreted that way. The result was this website, which checks for news articles from Reuters every hour, parses the text for naturally occurring haikus, then chooses one at random and juxtaposes it with a recent, relevant photo from flickr.
Haiku the News