M U R A L S

I’m a formally educated designer but a lifetime painter. 
Sometimes what your wall needs best is not a framed photo, but a complete makeover! From forests to oceans and everything in-between, let’s discuss what world you want to be transported to.

• • •

BOB & DAVE
San Francisco, CA

“We want the space to be a source of inspiration for throwing clay.”

A garage can be more than just a garage, and in my clients’ case, it was exactly that. After renovating half of their garage to be a throwing studio for pottery, the white walls felt sterile and void of inspiration. I was tasked with bringing movement and life into the studio, conveying motion that would aide their own as they continued to create gorgeous ceramic pieces.

VERA & MICHAEL
Los Angeles, CA

Everything but the heat.

Many of the 1940’s apartment buildings in the Los Feliz area of Los Angeles have the unfortunate conversion to a solid block of nothing. My clients didn’t want to spend the money on an electric fireplace, but still wanted the visual reminder of their colder roots (Connecticut).

Hold my brush.

FRED & GINNY
Satellite Beach, FL

An outdoor mural not just for the home owners, but for every person who passes by in the canal.

Fred and Ginny have known me since I was 9.

Fred asked me when I was 16 if I could paint a mural on his outdoor wall so everyone out back (as in, everyone passing in the canal) would be envious. That’s how Fred got me excited about things - by flattering me from the start. I spent a month painting them a tropical mural. Over time, the salty air and Florida sun stripped away some of the saturation and hue. So in 2021, I surprised Fred by bringing it back to life.

KALEIGH & RYAN (us!)

Seattle, WA

Transporting guests to a nautical world by simply opening the Murphy Bed.

The Pacific Northwest offers mountains, rain forests, and coasts. As a native Floridian. I wanted to honor the latter.
I built a custom Murphy bed for our second bedroom which operated as an office every other day it wasn’t being slept in. Instead of framed photos, shelves or anything else somewhat expected, I opted for a mural of an underwater scene you’d typically experience on a submarine.