Which of your projects are you proudest of and why?
To date my favorite project is a self-initiated one, my "Tools of the Trade" series. It was incredibly time-intensive—I'm always drawn to things that take much longer than I have to spend on them, ha! Thankfully it was time well-spent, as the final product was really tight. Most people who create tactile lettering come from a styling or illustrative background, whereas I bring a lot of typographic study to the project; and I think that shows in this project in terms of composition and letterform quality. It's always a struggle to get materials to conform to make great letterforms, and you usually have to accept and embrace the limitations of each material as you work with it, but the tools made for a malleable, if tricky, medium. It's a great show-off series, although I still haven't successfully pitched the concept of tool type for an ad campaign yet!
What’s the creative scene like in your hometown of Detroit? How does it differ from your new base in San Francisco?
Detroit's a fascinating city. There's so much history there, creatively, but mostly remembered for industrial design or music. The industries that have driven the Michigan economy in the past century have created a blue-collar, Rust Belt grittiness in the culture, and I think that's why you see a lot of hard-working, no-nonsense creatives emerge from the region. SF has a few different cultures I think—the historically counter-cultural city, the recent but louder tech culture, the varying cultural personalities seeping in from all the corners of the Bay Area. It creates a fascinating milieu and it's hard to define, but it's a much more laid back, playful and colorful vibe than the more industrial Detroit or the dusty Denver, where I spent a year between my hometown and the west coast.