Web Design

I've been doing web design/development for over 12 years. For five years taught web design at Bridgerland Applied Technology College. Below are a few examples of my work. Click on the thumbnails to get a full size view of the work in a new window or tab.
Steve Schaelling did this design. I converted his concept designs into a working flash site. We worked with Ryan Shaw to develop the back end and inner workings. This site allows the user to assemble their own logo from pre-made icons. It then sends the user the finished logo in both vector and raster formats.
An experiment in a user configurable site. The user can slide menus, thumbnails, and images around. A line shows the navigation path. This would fall into the novelty or vanity site category. Try clicking and dragging things around. Keep in mind that the resume information inside this page is out of date.
A product page design for a spa site. I wanted to communicate the warmth and comfort that a nice spa brings. Everything is mocked up as though it were an actual product page.

This is a concept for a new Proform site. The idea was that products could be scrolled through from side to side. The concept was never used, but could work quite well.

This is also an example of how a site design can be inspired by pre-existing marketing materials. The large halftone patterns were borrowed from a brochure done by another designer.

In preparation for the olympics, Cache Valley Limo wanted a site design that communicated simplicity. They also wanted the site to load quickly and communicate clearly. I followed the example of their clean white vans. No budget was available at the time for photography so existing photos were used. The site has been changed some what since I worked on it last.
Another of Steve Schaelling's designs. From his story boards or comps made in photoshop, I created a template into which we could massage the legacy information of this pre-existing site.
A novel idea—Make a banner into a micro-web site. My idea was that a user could navigate a micro site without ever leaving the page they were on. Far better than those anoying animated banners.