This is a web-based daily diary I did for a Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital postoperative pain research study. The login page is the only static page in the site. Everything else is generated dynamically by a 1700 line Perl CGI.
This copy is available for demo purposes. The patient data in this version is all made up so no one's privacy is violated. If you would like, you can log in to the administrative interface with username "admin" and password "demo", set up a user file for yourself, and give it a test run. In the real version, another script would send you an email every morning reminding you to fill out the diary that day.
This site was my group's final project in my multimedia systems class. I did all of the photography work as well as the creation of the QuickTime VR files including hotspot navigation. It was a learning project, so there are a few visual glitches here and there.
This is my personal website. I mainly use it to showcase my photography collection, design work, and as a way for my professors to download or view my classwork.
Portions of it use a straight-forward utilitarian design, since it's primarily a file repository, but it's functional.
This page itself is a good representation of my coding abilities. In my free time I have been teaching myself to use Cascading Style Sheets to produce clean-looking, standards-based pages that work in any browser. This page uses no <TABLE> tags, and looks fine with or without CSS enabled. I usually write my HTML with a plain and simple text editor, and I try to keep my source code neat and maintainable.
One of my campus jobs as an undergraduate was to design and lay out publicity posters for Eldred Theater. I taught myself how to use whatever software I needed to accomplish each project. I started out using QuarkXPress, but eventually transitioned to using Adobe InDesign as my layout tool of choice. Photoshop has always been an essential tool.
I like this poster for Richard III because the looming eyes and crown of daggers in the black slash gives it an ominous tone.
This is the front cover of the play's 4-page program insert that was made up to look like a tabloid newpaper. During the show, people seemed to spend more time flipping through the program insert than watching the performance.
This is probably the most striking poster in my portfolio. It's a simple layout, but the image of the figure standing in shadows is quite powerful.
This is an image compositing project that I did for my digital color photography class. Looking around the table, you have to wonder who won.
This is a black and white image that I colored by hand in Photoshop. I had a little fun with the hair and beard color on this one. I had never realized how difficult it is to reproduce realistic skin tones.
Pure and simple photography. This is one of my favorites photos that I've taken. The photo is not retouched. It really looked like that.
This is a series of 14 photos taken around a 360 degree arc that were then stitched together into a seamless panorama. It was taken at the edge of Wade Lagoon. Visible University Circle buildings include the Cleveland Institute of Music, the Peter B. Lewis Building, Kelvin Smith Library, University Hospitals, Severance Hall, Baker Building, Adelbert College, Kent Hale Smith, Amasa Stone Chapel, Crawford Hall, the United Methodist Church, the Judson Manor, and the Cleveland Museum of Art. Some of these are only really visible in the full resolution 10746x1088 version which is not available online.