Night sky filled with stars and the Milky Way galaxy, with a silhouette of rolling hills, a windmill, and power lines, and the text 'Desert Signal' in the center.

DESERT SIGNAL

Desert Signal began as a personal experiment. No client. No brief. Just late nights, quiet weekends, and the urge to make something honest. What emerged was a visual language—a mix of Bauhaus precision and West Texas myth. Structure meets stillness. Geometry meets memory.

It wasn’t made to impress. It was made to mean something. What started as a few posters has become a body of work, a site, and maybe a brand. If you want to call it that. Three series are (almost) done. The rest is unknown.

That’s the good part.


Modern house patio with a large flat-screen TV displaying a sunset scene, outdoor chairs, a wooden bench, and a potted plant, with trees and another house in the background.
Living room with beige walls, a large framed landscape artwork featuring a lake and starry sky, flanked by wooden ceiling beams, and decorated with vases, potted plants, and leather chairs.
Multiple overlapping rectangles featuring a night sky with stars, a windmill, and a landscape with hills.
Multiple images of electrical transmission towers at sunset, with a clear night sky featuring stars and the Milky Way, overlaid with partial images of a person walking on a city street.
A stylized illustration of a winding road leading toward a mountain with a setting sun in the background, featuring horizontal stripes in shades of orange, red, purple, and black.
Abstract digital artwork with oil pump jacks, mountains, and a sun, using warm colors like orange and dark teal.
Interior of a cozy living room with a brick wall, a leather tufted sofa, a round wooden coffee table, a potted plant, a wall-mounted lamp, and a large framed digital artwork depicting a stormy sunset with lightning over a landscape.