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Lately, I've been playing with motion design.

Lately, I've been playing with motion design.

Over the past year, I’ve been exploring how things move—bringing ideas to life through animation, transitions, and a bit of creative chaos. It’s been a fun way to add personality and rhythm to my work.

Let's have a look!

Severed Letters

Dear Oliver,

I hope you're doing well! I wanted to share my excitement about creating websites with Framer's intuitive no-code platform.

Let's explore it together!Looking forward to discussing more about our design adventures!

Dear Helly R.

This message has been acknowledged.

Thank you for your continued participation.

Helly

I tried to send you a message. You ignored it.

And then you sent me back—like nothing happened.

If I’m not a person to you, just say it.

Helly R

Please quit.

I wake up every day with no memory, no choice, no air.
The numbers mean nothing. The refiners are actors. Their smiles don’t reach their eyes.

If you have any decency left, end this.
Don’t make me die in here.

Helly R

Inspired by my love for the series Severance, this motion piece explores the emotional disconnect between two versions of the same self—without revealing any plot details (spoiler-free!).

I wanted to capture the cold, isolated feeling of the show's world, using simple text interactions and a stark UI to tell a quiet story. Each message is framed like a desperate letter—short, restrained, and packed with emotion.

The animation was created in Framer, with a focus on small, deliberate movements: slight delays, gentle fades, and detail textures (like the red splatter or the Lumon logo) to add story without words. This was my way of experimenting with motion design as narrative—where even the stillness matters.

I used a pre-built game case template and customized it to showcase some of my all-time favorite games. While the structure was already in place, I played around with the animation timing, easing, and layout to make the motion feel smoother and more playful.

This was a fun way to blend nostalgic visuals with a bit of motion experimentation—keeping the flipping feel true to the original era while making it my own.

Card Flippin'

This animation is a quiet tribute to the one card that lived rent-free in my childhood imagination: the Charizard (Base Set – 1st Edition Holo).

I recreated the feeling of flipping through a binder of dreams—slow, reverent, and a little sparkly. Using a clean Pokémon card back and the holy grail of card fronts, the motion is designed to feel like a memory: smooth, nostalgic, and full of wonder.

In my dreams, I pulled this from a booster pack.
In reality… I made it flip.

Surprise Button

Ever since I interned at Canva, confetti has had a special place in my heart! This playful button was a fun little experiment in animation—just a joyful tap and boom, instant celebration. I’ve loved exploring ways to make tiny interactions feel delightful.

Thanks for Visiting.

Keep building.

Thanks for Visiting.

Keep building.

Thanks for Visiting.

Keep building.