

Hi there! I’m Cassie. 🤗
Hi there! I’m Cassie. 🤗
I didn’t start my journey in UX out of a lifelong passion for design.
My background is in public sculpture, an incredibly demanding yet expressive physical art form that I love. But, like many paths in fine art, it is difficult to maintain a sustainable lifestyle, especially in the early career. While I was deeply drawn to its power and potential, I began to look for a creative practice that could offer more structure, clearer goals, and real-world impact—without letting go of the emotional and aesthetic values I care about.
That’s how I came to design, not out of passion at first, but as a pragmatic decision. But the deeper I went into the world of UX, the more I became fascinated by it. Every small design decision carries the weight of logic, empathy, and risk. Designing digital products isn't just about aesthetics, it’s about navigating complexity, aligning user needs with business goals, collaborating across disciplines, and constantly making trade-offs with intention.
In many ways, I’ve come to see UX design as a different kind of sculpting: shaping invisible systems, crafting flows of interaction, and designing space, not physical, but mental and digital journeys people go through. And just like with public art, I’m still drawn to the same core idea: creating experiences that resonate, that feel intuitive, and that hold meaning.
I’m someone who feels deeply, who notices details others might miss, and who is always trying to understand how people experience the world, whether it’s through a public installation, or a digital interface.
I didn’t start my journey in UX out of a lifelong passion for design.
My background is in public sculpture, an incredibly demanding yet expressive physical art form that I love. But, like many paths in fine art, it is difficult to maintain a sustainable lifestyle, especially in the early career. While I was deeply drawn to its power and potential, I began to look for a creative practice that could offer more structure, clearer goals, and real-world impact—without letting go of the emotional and aesthetic values I care about.
That’s how I came to design, not out of passion at first, but as a pragmatic decision. But the deeper I went into the world of UX, the more I became fascinated by it. Every small design decision carries the weight of logic, empathy, and risk. Designing digital products isn't just about aesthetics, it’s about navigating complexity, aligning user needs with business goals, collaborating across disciplines, and constantly making trade-offs with intention.
In many ways, I’ve come to see UX design as a different kind of sculpting: shaping invisible systems, crafting flows of interaction, and designing space, not physical, but mental and digital journeys people go through. And just like with public art, I’m still drawn to the same core idea: creating experiences that resonate, that feel intuitive, and that hold meaning.
I’m someone who feels deeply, who notices details others might miss, and who is always trying to understand how people experience the world, whether it’s through a public installation, or a digital interface.
zkex1011@gmail.com
zkex1011@gmail.com