Before beginning the transmission, I wanted to say thank you. You’re apart of a small (and I do mean small) band of people who subscribed to this thing.
So I guess Twitter was maybe going to implode recently (according to a mass hysteria that was rolling around the internet), but Twitter is still here (for now). So instead of using this thing as a Twitter replacement, I’ll be transmitting little exclusive sneak peaks at things I’m working on, stuff I’m thinking about, and just whatever is going on in my world that is cool.
I wont spam you, or sell you anything, but here is the first one, enjoy… or not, whatever, the unsubscribe button is at the bottom. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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“Working on my portfolio site.”
— Literally every designer, ever
No, but really, I have been working on my portfolio. But I don’t think of my site as just my portfolio, it’s more my personal site, or my corner of the internet. I periodically get this drive to update my site and it’s driven by a few motivations that I’ll illustrate in the form of some history:
2011-2013
— First version of my site was built on Cargo Collective, and it was purely a way to have a “design portfolio” online. I would customize it, but only in so far as you can customize a Cargo site. This is where I did discover my curiosity for code. Motivation: “Show the work” & “Tinker”
2014-2015
— Enter, Jekyll. I was learnt how to build my own sites and this ruby-based static site generator called Jekyll. I was rapidly learning this world of frontend development, and learning to enjoyed delivering my own site from scratch, and committing code. I created this moniker I called “Object & Subject” and that’s what I named my site. It was important at certain points to show case studies and the work on the site, as I was actively seeking work at the time. See v1. Motivation: “Show the work” & “Keep learning”
2016-2020
— Between this time I would redesign my site regularly, add new work. Mostly it became a practice in attempting new things. This is still true. In this range the site took many forms, but the primary form that evolved was that my personal site was a place to more purely represent “me” on the internet. Showing portfolio work was less important than making the site embody something that felt like a current version of me. In this time, I started to write more and use the journal part of my site a bit of a repository of my thoughts. See v2, v3, and v4. Motivation: “Embody myself“, “Keep learning” & “Show the work”
2021-2022
— At this time I rebuilt the site with Gatsby, a React based static site framework. This marks my evolution into more robust javascript frontend, and represents the latest version of the site today. I introduced the scrolling ticker, the multicolor gradient, Labil Grotesk, and some scroll interactions.
One marked departure in this version of the site is the absence of work (I can explain this another time, I later added a password protected link). What was significant is that the site had solely become a home for me, and that’s all I needed at the time, I didn’t feel pressure to share documented work, the site was just a playground. Around the middle of 2022, I even migrated the site over to Next.js and never turned back. See v5. Motivation: “Keep learning” & “ Embody myself”
Now
It’s the end of 2022, and I’m back at it. Redesigning my personal site. This time, I’m aiming to capture all of the intentions that I’ve had in the past. Tinker, Show the work, Keep Learning, and Embody myself.
The next several transmissions going through my experimentations and approach for rebuilding
Thanks for reading,
— John
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