Here is a selection of the UI/UX projects I’ve done in the last two decades. I enjoy thinking about how a user will move about a web application or site, and have been employing UI practices since very early in my web design/development career.


Interactive client page, Verisk Extreme Event Solutions (formerly AIR)

This specialty page was wireframed in Adobe XD, and I designed, and created the graphics as well as custom coded the HTML5, CSS3, and jQuery for this client testimonials page for Verisk EES’s site. The page is also responsive. This required coordination with clients for finding or requesting their logos, and a careful selection of images that made sense for each insurance client.

View the client page at Verisk EES


Conference agenda layout, Verisk

My company’s big yearly conference agenda had several tracks over several days. They wanted a clear way to denote the tracks, and with easy single clicks, for attendees to access the full description of each session. I wireframed a basic design for signoff by stakeholders (see animation, which was not final product), and then coded the agenda page for our website with custom jQuery, CSS3, and HTML5 for a responsive page where clients could find information with few clicks.


Verisk subscription user interface

Worked with the web manager and backend developers to design the login and user interface for the client account area of our website. Clients could control their subscriptions to various alerts, communications, and e-periodicals, request more advanced access, and change their password. The goal was to take a relatively complex set of controls (especially the subscriptions, as there were many options) and keep it simple for the user.


Harvard School of Dental Medicine

Working as independent web and design shop 75design, I had a client who had large web projects, primarily as a graphic designer. He handed off layout designs to me and I did the front end coding and CMS set up. One complex project was for Harvard School of Dental Medicine, who had relational data needs when it came to displaying pages dynamically on the new website. Working in ExpressionEngine, I designed the data entry to be entirely relational but keeping the CMS’s end user (admin assistants at HSDM) in mind, making sure the CMS forms made sense from a user input perspective. Gathering their specs and turning that into easy to update dynamic web pages took careful consideration of UI and UX principles.

I worked on a number of such websites with this client over several years, and it was satisfying to hand off websites and user docs that made it possible for small to medium sized clients to maintain their own content.


iPad Web UI for patient input in medical study (2012)

Before the word “web app” was even a buzzword, I built this web-based site designed specifically for iPad. The iPad device was handed off to physical therapy patients so they could enter survey data for a study, anonymously logging into their own account, using a series of web forms and replacing paper surveys that had to be entered manually into a database. The goal was to increase patient participation by making the survey easier to fill out and administer. I built the site ground up in ExpressionEngine 2, from wireframe to design to setting up the CMS and templates. The website’s look was built entirely in CSS3 with no graphics.


HTML5/CSS app in iBook (2014)

Designed iBook marketing piece (using existing branding) for EMS, creating an HTML/CSS widget within the iBooks for an interactive form where readers could determine their best solution with EMS. This concept-to-finished-product utilized both my technical skills and my design background (see Design portfolio page).


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