The web is for users, not browsers.

When I first started making web pages, the internet was in the throes of the browser wars. Designers used every imaginable hack to bend web pages to their aesthetic will, and to accommodate users of Internet Explorer and Netscape. These days, we've moved on to web standards, and conscientious web designers like me use markup language the way it was intended. The look and feel of a site is kept separate from the text and hyperlinks that comprise its content. Pages load faster, are available to more kinds of devices, and implementing redesigns is quick and painless.

Paper is dead, long live paper!

The web is the place for up-to-the-second customer communication, but print design remains an important part of most businesses. It begins with great branding and moves on to the basics: stationery, business cards and brochures. Many businesses also extend their paper presence to posters, signage and print advertising. Ideally, all these print efforts are coordinated with a great web presence, and though my focus is on web design and development, if you need paper, I have ideas and experience to bring to the table.