The Plastiq Tree

"Plastiq Tree" is a short animation created to raise awareness about the staggering number of real trees—around 120 million every year, that are cut down globally for Christmas celebrations alone. While the film is styled as an advertisement, its deeper purpose is to make viewers reflect on the often-overlooked impact this tradition has on our environment. By giving a voice (and emotion) to the trees, the animation gently highlights their “suffering,” urging us to rethink what we celebrate and how we celebrate it. It’s a reminder that festive joy doesn’t have to come at the expense of nature, and that alternatives, like sustainable or reusable trees, can still carry the same magic!

Cheap Therapy - Berlin Design Week

We’ve all got that relative. The one who can’t help but ask, “So… are you seeing anyone yet?” Or drop a subtle jab like, “That hair color is… bold.”

Since venting about your family gets old (and actual therapy costs a fortune), we created the next best thing: a brutally honest, hilariously sarcastic card game that helps you unpack family chaos; one daring question at a time.

No filters. No boundaries. Just painfully real conversations in the form of sharp wit and awkward laughs.

[Featured at Berlin Design Week 2025]— because apparently, we're not the only ones who needed this.

Sweet Sorrow Stop Motion

My very first frame-by-frame animation, a raw, visual exploration of how isolating depression can truly feel.

This piece showcases the quiet heaviness and repetitive nature of depression; a cycle that often feels endless, invisible, and inescapable to those experiencing it. Through every drawn frame, I tried to express that sense of being trapped in your own mind, disconnected from the world, and silently overwhelmed.

Creating this animation was both a challenge and a release, a small attempt to give shape to a feeling that’s so often unseen.

The art of overthinking

The Art of Overthinking is a short animation that explores the endless loop of overanalyzing, second-guessing, and spiraling thoughts that many people experience. It’s a visual representation of the mental cycle that often feels impossible to break — where one thought leads to another, and then right back to the beginning. The piece doesn’t try to solve overthinking but instead captures the feeling of being stuck inside it, using rhythm, repetition, and subtle shifts to mirror how it creeps in and takes over.

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