FERRA is a conceptual furniture brand creating handcrafted, sculptural pieces. The website takes the form of a digital gallery, inviting visitors to explore the collection at a calm, unhurried pace.
A modernist grid, neutral palette and minimalist typography put the focus on material and proportion. Subtle brutalist cues and gentle transitions echo the character of the furniture, giving the brand an aura of quiet, contemporary luxury.
Sometimes, you don’t need a complex or expensive website. In many cases, a well-designed one-pager is all it takes to build a strong brand presence. That’s the mindset behind this concept—just like with coffee, it’s all about quality, not quantity.
Looose is more than a premium streetwear brand—it’s loooose, like the oversized cuts it’s built on. That looseness shapes the layout, the naming and the site’s rhythm, giving the digital experience its spacious, unforced character.
In contrast, the monospaced typeface brings strictness and precision, lifting the whole experience into a premium space. At the same time, the design amplifies the brand’s community spirit, turning the store into a place where buying clothes feels like joining something bigger.
CLUB 1984 recalls a time when style had edge and status told a story—a Ferrari Testarossa rolling down Sunset Blvd, Jordan with a cigar after the Finals, young DiCaprio in a double-breasted suit. A cinematic world where confidence, taste and nostalgia take the lead.
This concept website redesign doesn’t compete—it amplifies the brand’s identity. Built on strong visual content that drives buying decisions, it adds a typographic layer with weight. The oversized serif logo set in Domaine seals the sense of exclusivity.
Cosmic Studio is a concept for an architecture studio focused on sustainable buildings and transformation projects. The website was designed to reflect that same clarity and precision, letting the work take center stage.
Horizontal scrolling, a logotype in difference blend mode, and minimalist bottom-bar navigation—these distinctive choices make the site stand out while keeping the focus on architecture. The projects remain front and center, allowing the work itself to define the studio’s identity.
Rooted in a passion for wine culture, Gusto Arte brings together a world of bottles, stories, and origins under one digital roof. The website recreates the experience of browsing a real wine store—inviting, informative, and approachable for both enthusiasts and beginners.
The website introduces features that guide and inspire discovery: a country-based navigation that combines education with exploration, a quiz that recommends bottles tailored to personal taste, and product pages enriched with stories, aromas, and pairing tips.
Patrz! Taco w słuchawkach, Taco w Figmie.
Concept website for Polish rapper Taco Hemingway, designed as a cohesive digital stage for his work. It presents his discography and bio, a store with albums and merch, and upcoming concerts—all in a minimalist style that lets his work take the spotlight.
Hidden in the Scottish Highlands, Avernish Hideway is a cabin designed for slowing down and reconnecting with nature. The website mirrors this atmosphere—calm, spacious and unhurried—so that the experience begins long before arrival.
Natural colors, clean typography and subtle motion bring the photographs to life without distraction. Minimalist layouts focus on the cabin and its surroundings, turning the booking process into the first step of the journey into Scotland’s wilderness.
Designing it, I almost got carried away myself—and ended up adding this region of Scotland to my travel bucket list.