MY CREATIVE PROCESS
More often than not, most of my projects begin with prayer. Before moodboards or sketches, I ask God for clarity, direction, and inspiration — that the work I create would not just be beautiful, but meaningful, intentional, and Spirit-led. Whether I’m designing a sermon series or building out a worship environment, I seek to understand the message, the moment, the heart behind it, — both from the team I’m collaborating with and from the Lord.
From there, I move into ideation, gathering inspiration and creating. I think in story, space, and emotion — asking not just how will this look? but how will this feel? In the room. On the screen. On someone’s feed. Because I also serve as a live production director, I design with real-world application in mind. I understand how visuals, colors, and composition translate across LED walls, projectors, and digital platforms, which allows me to carry an idea from concept through execution without losing cohesion or clarity.
It’s a process that blends both sides of my brain — creative intuition and technical precision — but it always begins with the Holy Spirit. That sacred overlap between the divinely creative and the divinely engineered is where I do my best work: turning vision into reality in a way that’s both excellent and deeply meaningful.