My Story
The first spark I can remember is a clown.
I was still a little girl when I asked my mother to draw one for me. She wasn’t an artist, not in any formal sense - just a busy mom with a pencil in her hand. But when she finished and turned the paper toward me, something inside me ignited.
To anyone else, it might have looked like a simple, casual sketch. To me, it was pure magic. I can still see that clown as clearly as if it were in front of me now—the lines, the expression, the way it felt alive. In that moment, every circuit in my young brain lit up.
I didn’t know what a “designer” was. I didn’t know about composition, aesthetics, or craft. I just knew one thing with absolute certainty:
I wanted to create.
That was my calling.
Learning to See the Light
A few years later, another image etched itself into my memory: two colorful glass roosters on my parents’ sideboard. They were small, almost ordinary objects, but to me they were mesmerizing.
I watched the way the light moved through them—the glow, the reflections, the shifting colors. The transparency felt almost otherworldly, as if the glass held its own private universe. I was captivated by that dance between color, light, and material.
That quiet moment became my second turning point. I didn’t have the words for it then, but looking back, it was the beginning of a lifelong fascination with transparency and color - a thread that would weave through everything I would go on to create.
Becoming a Designer
With those early sparks guiding me, I dove into the world of art and design. As a child, I took any art class I could. Drawing, painting, experimenting—I was determined to turn that inner pull into a real skill.
Eventually, that path led me to formal design studies. I was like an arrow flying toward a very clear target: I would become a professional designer. And I did.
For years, I worked in branding and design, creating visual identities and experiences for major corporations and retail businesses. It was demanding, thrilling work: solving problems, telling stories, shaping how people see and feel about a brand.
Then life gave me another beautiful assignment: motherhood.
When my second daughter was born, I realized I needed a different rhythm - one that would allow me to stay close to my children without giving up the creativity that fueled me. So I built my own independent home studio.
That studio became more than just a workspace. It was a living bridge between my two worlds: the deep love of being a mother and the deep need to create at a high level. Balancing those roles wasn’t always easy, but it was incredibly fulfilling. And it worked. My studio grew into a thriving, independent practice.
From Paper to Glass
After many rewarding years in graphic design, another dream began to whisper to me: what if I created my own stationery brand?
My younger sister, who had also caught the “design bug,” joined me. Together, we poured ourselves into building a brand from scratch. It was a new kind of creation - designing not just visuals, but an entire universe of products people could hold, gift, and cherish.
That venture succeeded. And when the time was right, we each felt the pull to continue on our own independent paths. For me, that transition was an opening a chance to return to the spark that had always been there since those glass roosters on my parents’ sideboard.
I began studying glasswork. At first, I made small figurines, savoring the feeling of working directly with the material. The process was tactile, intimate, and incredibly satisfying. From there, my curiosity expanded into other mediums, like epoxy and resin casting.
I realized that no matter what form my work took paper, glass, resin - there was always a single thread connecting it all: my childhood obsession with the interplay of transparency, light, and vibrant color.
My Creative Vision Today
Everything I create today stands on the foundation of my background in graphic design. Years of visual problem-solving taught me how to balance a composition, guide the eye, and evoke emotion through shape, color, and form.
That training is my backbone. It helps me intuitively understand what “feels right” and why.
Now, I blend that graphic sensibility with elements of industrial design, bringing structure and dimension into my pieces. The result is work that sits at the intersection of art, design, and object - playful yet thoughtful, decorative yet deeply intentional.
I love to create pieces that don’t just sit quietly in a room, but catch the light, and your attention - and refuse to let go. Some of these have evolved into my signature collections, like my “Rubber Ducks” and my “Balloon Dogs,” which have become beloved favorites among my clients.
One of my proudest recent achievements is a system of wall-chains that I developed over many months. It’s more than décor; it’s an interactive experience. The collector becomes a co-creator, arranging and composing the chains to make a piece that is uniquely theirs. That collaboration - between artist, object, light, and viewer - is a true highlight of my work.
Creating With You
Today, my pieces live in homes around the world. I specialize in custom, commissioned works that are deeply personal and made to resonate with the person who lives with them.
But at the heart of it all, I’m still that child who fell in love with a simple clown sketch and two glass roosters glowing on a sideboard. I’m still chasing the magic of light passing through color and material, of ideas turning into something you can see, touch, and feel.
If you have an idea - an image, a feeling, a memory that’s been buzzing in your mind - I would be honored to help you bring it to life.
Let’s create something together: something luminous, meaningful, and uniquely yours.