We build for the cultural sector: art centers, archives, artists, academics, and organizations doing difficult and necessary things.
Express Newark
Custom WordPress theme for a center for art, design, and social change supported by Rutgers University–Newark. A complex institution — galleries, studios, residencies, events, K-12 programming — organized into a site that visitors and staff can both navigate. Development plus usability advisory; design by Connie Harvey.
The Anti-Eugenics Project
Custom WordPress theme and UX strategy for an interdisciplinary project reckoning with the legacy of eugenics. Accessibility wasn’t a requirement on this project; it was the point. Built with and for the disability justice community, including a video archive of the week-long Dismantling Eugenics convening.
A Long Walk Home
Custom WordPress theme and usability advisory for the art-based nonprofit empowering young people to end violence against girls and women. Design by Connie Harvey.
Connie Harvey Studio
Custom Shopify build for a letterpress artist’s print shop — clean, fast, and centered on the work.
NYU Center for the Humanities
Ongoing WordPress strategy and management for one of NYU’s central academic institutions: the quiet, continuous work of keeping a busy institutional site healthy.
Archive Emotion
An interactive music player and digital memorial built for an EP release — part archive, part artwork, part time machine. Sometimes a website is a place to put a feeling.
Insecurity Hits
WooCommerce build for an independent record label putting out punk and post-punk from New York’s DIY scene. Cassettes, vinyl, and merch in a shop that stays out of the music’s way — fast, self-managed, and run on open-source tools, which for a label of misfits and outcasts is less a technical choice than a genre convention.
Mayors Alliance to End Childhood Hunger
The Alliance — a nonpartisan coalition of 600+ mayors working to end childhood hunger — came to us with a site they’d paid for twice: an agency had built a fragile React frontend wired to a WordPress database, an architecture nobody on their team could update or afford to keep fixing. We rebuilt it as what it should have been the first time: a custom open-source WordPress theme, including an integrated interactive map of member cities, maintainable by the advocacy team that actually runs it.
