The Study of Space

Here, education and application are separate by design.

The design world is built on extremes.
Generic DIY advice that pushes cheap, one-size-fits-all solutions—or high-end designers charging thousands to create homes most people will never live in.

After ten years in the industry, I know this: Design advice only works when you understand when to use it, how to use it, and whether it applies to your home at all.



→ Learn

→ Apply

The subscription gives you the knowledge.
The groups give you the decisions.

The subscription is information only—clear frameworks, concepts, and context you can return to anytime.

The groups are applied work. You bring your project, and I walk you through the decisions I would make—step by step—so you can take action.

Who I am...

I used to think I was just good at design.




I was trained in the arts—drawing, painting, sculpting, building—and I assumed my value was teaching others what I knew so they could create beautiful spaces on their own.

But my real strength wasn’t design.
It was discernment.

What actually moved the needle wasn’t aesthetics or rules.
It was judgment.

The clients who experienced the biggest shifts weren’t the ones following formulas. They were the ones who trusted me with context—how they lived, what they noticed, what they avoided. They let me see the whole picture.

They didn’t ask for inspiration.
They asked, “You know me—what would you do?”

That’s where the work clicked.

I could see what they wanted, what they needed, and how to apply the right principles—without forcing a system that didn’t fit.

It’s one thing to understand design.
It’s another to understand people.

Generator. Scorpio Rising. Sees what others miss. Picky, in the best way.

Past Work: 

Restoring a historic home while honoring its original character—making careful, contemporary decisions without erasing the past.


A color-forward, grandmillennial home shaped around the client’s confidence, comfort, and love of bold, expressive interiors.

Modern function layered with nostalgic references—clean lines softened by material and proportion choices that feel familiar, not cold.