
Why My Phone Cases Are More Than Just Pretty Pictures
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There’s this idea out there that making art for phone cases is easy.
That you can just grab an image, crop it to fit a rectangle, and boom—done.
But that’s not what I do. That’s not what this is.
I’m not in the business of slapping art onto products.
I’m in the business of translating feelings into something you can hold.
I don’t make phone cases because it’s trendy. I make them because they’re tiny canvases—personal, functional, everyday pieces of art.
When I design a case, it always starts with a spark.
A strange little emotion.
A weird character that showed up in my head one morning.
A retro texture I can’t stop thinking about.
Sometimes I sketch it first in my mind. Sometimes I build the vibe before I even know the subject. But either way, nothing goes into my shop unless it moves me first.
Here’s the truth:
Creating for a phone case is different than creating for a gallery.
It’s intimate. You touch it dozens of times a day. It lives in your photos, your hand, your daily orbit.
So when I make one, I think:
Will this piece still feel like art when it’s scratched and smudged and dropped on a café floor?
Will it still hold its weird magic when someone’s texting their mom or checking emails?
If the answer’s yes—I release it.
My phone cases aren’t just printed graphics.
They’re made by an artist who obsesses, questions, edits, and gets attached.
I make art that’s slow in a fast world. I make phone cases with stories hiding inside them.
And that’s why I don’t just slap art on a phone case and call it done.
Because I’m not just making a case.
I’m making a pocket-sized piece of me—for your everyday life.