Waywandering Designs grew out of a long-standing love of design, cities, and the everyday systems that help us move through them.
I’ve always been drawn to how places are shaped not just by landmarks, but by routes, rhythms, and shared spaces—bus stops, platforms, sidewalks, stations, and the in-between places where people cross paths. Over time, I’ve come to realize that some of the places I love most aren’t destinations at all, but the connective tissue that brings a city together: the lines that link neighborhoods and the infrastructure that quietly supports daily life.
Public transportation, in particular, has a way of shifting how you experience a city. It encourages a different pace and perspective—one that reveals how neighborhoods connect, how people gather, and how movement itself becomes part of the character of a place.
My design work is inspired by moving through cities with attention—often by bus, train, or on foot—and by the built environments that support that movement. I’m interested in the beauty of civic infrastructure, the power of transit routes, and the spaces we collectively make to travel, wait, meet, and coexist.
Waywandering is the idea that a place can be understood not by rushing to destinations, but by engaging with the journey itself. It’s about moving through a city for the sake of seeing it—allowing for detours, pauses, and moments of curiosity along the way.
Waywandering Designs exists as a space to explore these ideas through print and graphic work. Each piece reflects a way of paying attention to shared, public spaces and the systems that shape daily life—designed to be lived with, reflected on, and revisited over time.
This work is an ongoing practice of noticing: how cities move, how people move within them, and how design can honor the everyday structures that bring us together.