Portfolio

Portfolio

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Jobcenter Pilot – Simplifying Complex Forms for Refugees

 

Overview

   A conceptual pilot video demonstrating how animated explainer content can help Jobcenter communicate complex procedures and forms in a clear, accessible, and emotionally sensitive way.

 

The Challenge

   Many refugees applying for financial support struggle with the existing Jobcenter PDFs:

  • Some have limited formal education and cannot read German letters confidently.

  • The forms contain complex bureaucratic concepts that are difficult even for native speakers.

 

My Approach

   To create a solution that truly fits the target group, I conducted informal field research:

  • Spoke with staff at Kontaktstelle Wohnen, who work daily with refugees searching for housing.

  • Interviewed several refugees to understand the exact points of confusion, fears, and recurring misunderstandings.

  • Identified crucial pain points in the application process and clarified how the video should sound—supportive, simple, non-bureaucratic.

 

The Outcome

   I developed a visual language that avoids heavy text and focuses on:

  1. clean, friendly icons

  2. simple step-by-step sequences

  3. calm motion and color choices designed for viewers dealing with stress or trauma

  4. clear metaphors to explain difficult bureaucratic concepts

 
 
 
 
 
 

MachtLos e.V. – Inclusive Explainer Video for People in Crisis

 

Overview

   An animated explainer video created for MachtLos e.V., an organization supporting people with disabilities, psychological illnesses, homelessness, and social exclusion. The goal was to communicate their services in a way that feels accessible, engaging, and emotionally safe for their community.

The Challenge

   The target group faced multiple barriers:

  • Many live with mental health issues, trauma, or intellectual disabilities.

  • Some are homeless or have been rejected by their families, which makes trust and communication difficult.

  • Their attention and emotional energy are often low; they spend a lot of time on TikTok and Instagram, but traditional informational videos do not reach them.

  • The video needed to be as engaging as a social media reel, without falling into superficial “dopamine-hit” content, and without overwhelming viewers who are in psychological distress.

My Approach

   To create a video that genuinely resonates, I immersed myself in their environment:

  • I joined their street-work team, observing direct interactions with people in crisis.

  • I spent time inside the MachtLos office and attended consulting sessions (with the consent of those present).

  • I listened closely to the stories, emotional states, and communication patterns of the target audience.

  • Based on these insights, I designed a concept that balances high engagement with empathy, focusing on simplicity, warmth, and recognition of lived experiences.

The Outcome

   The final animation combines:

  • Clear, minimal language

  • Friendly, inclusive visuals with emotional grounding

  • A tone that invites viewers to feel seen, understood, and supported

  • Motion cues and transitions that avoid overstimulation and maintain psychological safety

 

Konzeptwerk Neue Ökonomie – Animated Map & Global Inequality

 

Overview

   An educational animation created for Konzeptwerk Neue Ökonomie (KNoE), a Leipzig-based think tank working on social-ecological transformation. The video required a highly customized animated map to highlight structural inequalities between the Global North and Global South.

 

The Challenge

   KNoE needed more than a typical “map animation.”
   They were looking for someone who could:

  • Animate a 3D globe and create dynamic transitions between world regions

  • Visually separate Global North and Global South in a clear and meaningful way

  • Emphasize the political and economic divides between the two regions

  • Go beyond the default capabilities of GEOlayers, which cannot fully express complex political categories out of the box

The challenge was to develop a visual system that clearly illustrates an unequal global reality without oversimplifying it.

 

My Approach

   I joined the project as a map-animation specialist with deep experience in GEOlayers and custom scripting in After Effects.
My process included:

  • Writing additional scripts to extend GEOlayers’ limitations

  • Creating a customized world map where Global North and South are distinguished, grouped, and individually controllable

  • Designing a color-coding and motion system that makes global inequalities immediately readable

  • Ensuring that geographic accuracy, political nuance, and visual clarity work together in one coherent animation

 

The Outcome

   I developed a flexible animated globe system that allows:

  • Smooth transitions between regions

  • Clear differentiation between Global North and Global South

  • Strong visual emphasis on economic and political contrasts

  • A clean, minimal style that matches KNoE’s educational and activist identity

 

Character Design – From Sketch to Final Animation

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Overview

   A character design project showcasing my full creative workflow — from initial hand-drawn sketches to the final animated character. This example highlights how I translate abstract ideas from clients into clear, expressive visual identities.

 

The Challenge

   Many clients come from very different professional and cultural backgrounds.
They often have:

  • strong feelings about what their character should “represent,”

  • but no visual language to explain it,

  • and difficulty describing style, emotion, or personality in artistic terms.

The task is not only to design a character — but to build a bridge between their world and the animation world.

 

My Approach

   To create a design that truly fits the client’s needs, I follow a collaborative and transparent process:

  • I listen deeply to the client and learn about their work, audience, and emotional goals.

  • I translate their descriptions into multiple sketch explorations — different poses, moods, and proportions.

  • I share these early sketches to help clients recognize what they want (and what they don’t).

  • This makes it much easier for them to express their preferences and refine the direction.

The two sketches shown here are part of this iterative process: exploring proportions, emotional tone, and narrative symbolism.

 

The Outcome

   The final character is a polished version of the sketches — visually clean, emotionally expressive, and ready for animation.
It preserves the sensitivity and personality the client wanted, while staying consistent with the overall narrative style of the project.

 

Character Rigging – Custom-Illustrated Walking Cycle

Overview

   This is a self-initiated animation created to demonstrate my character rigging and walk-cycle animation skills. The character, walking with an umbrella, was designed and illustrated entirely by me to ensure full control over the animation process.

 

The Challenge

   In many client projects, illustrators create beautiful characters, but often these designs are not animation-ready. Common issues include:

  • joints not separated into layers

  • missing limbs from behind the torso

  • merged shapes that can’t deform

  • no consideration for motion arcs or pivot points

  • designs that look perfect as an illustration, but become impractical for animation

Fixing these issues can take hours and slow down the workflow.

 

My Approach

   To avoid these limitations, I usually illustrate my own characters, especially when the animation requires complex rigging.
This gives me:

  • full control over layer structure

  • proper separation of limbs and joints

  • clean geometry for deformation

  • predictable movement for walk cycles

  • a workflow that is fast, clean, and reliable

For this rig, I:

  • illustrated the character with animation-friendly layer hierarchy

  • built a full rig with controllers for arms, legs, torso, and umbrella

  • created smooth walk-cycle motion with natural weight shift

  • added secondary motion to the umbrella and clothes

 

The Outcome

   A fully rigged, cleanly animated walking character that demonstrates:

  • rigging discipline

  • understanding of anatomy in motion

  • illustration optimized for animation

  • technical efficiency and professional pipeline

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