
CUSTOM DESIGN Screenprints
CRONOS BICIMENSAJERÍA
Pen & ink, Photoshop, and Screenprint
Mexico City, Mexico
Promotional design for a bike messenger company
1-5: FINAL DESIGN: A few designs were proposed before settling on the Aztec god of wind, Ehécatl, delivering a package with the Cronos Logo on a cargo bike. A front-facing image and a side-facing image were printed using discharge ink to create a soft, breathable finish.
6: DESIGN OPTION 1: Ehécatl
7: DESIGN OPTION 2: Coatlicúe
PEDALEA LIBRE
BIKE POLO TEAM SHIRTS
Pen & ink, Photoshop, and Screenprint
Logo for Pedalea Libre's series of bike mechanics workshops for women, trans, and nonbinary folx in Mexico City.
These workshops sought to empower marginalized communities through the freedom of transportation alternatives. After the workshops, attendees received a small tote bag for bike tools that was screenprinted with this logo, designed to feel both inclusive and empowering.

BICI POLO MEXICO
Pen & ink, Gouache, Photoshop, and Sublimation
Various hand drawn and painted designs for a Bici Polo Mexico shirt.
1-3. FINAL DESIGN: The Aztec god of drinking and excess, Macuil Ocelotl, challenges the god of war,
Huitzilopochtli, in a one-on-one.
4-5. UNUSED DESIGNS: The feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl
reimagined with polo references.
6-7. TEAM SHIRT: The design doubled as a uniform for the bike polo team "Jumanji."
8-10. FONT: Designed to resemble the Mayan glyph writing system.
PULPO PEDAL
Pen & ink and Photoshop
Mexico City, Mexico
Designs for a live screen printing event
Pulpo Pedal was organized by a local Colombian artist who invited other local artists to make designs related to cycling in the city. Attendees brought whatever they wanted to be printed.
1-4. OPTION 1: Inspired by a catcall a friend received one night riding her bike: "Where are you going all alone?" To which she cooly responded, "I'm not doing this for you."
5-6. OPTION 2: A variation without the split contrast and streetlamp
BICI POLO FÉMINAS
Pen & ink, Photoshop, and Screenprint
Mexico City, Mexico
Parts of this design originally were intended for another project that never materialized, but I liked the design too much to scrap it. I later pitched the design for Cronos Bicimensajería before reworking it as an image celebrating the FLINTA spaces in Mexican Bike Polo. The design is a reference to an Aztec carving of Coatlicüe, the goddess of creation and destruction.
BOMBARDIERS race
Pen & ink and Photoshop
Mexico City, Mexico
Various concept designs commissioned for a bike race event that never occurred
1. EHÉCATL: The first concept is of the Aztec god of wind riding a track bike.
2-4: COATLICÜE: The second concept is a reimagining of an Aztec carving of Coatlicüe, the goddess of life, death, and rebirth.
While the event never occurred, the designs were repurposed for other projects.





























































