Boolean /ˈbuː.li.ən/ adjective, noun
Of or relating to a system of logic based on opposites such as true/false or 0/1; marked by clarity, precision, and repeatable structure; often used metaphorically to describe order, reproducibility, and the frameworks that enable consistency.

Blur /blɜːr/ noun, verb
A softening or obscuring of form in which edges dissolve and distinctions become uncertain; associated with ambiguity, fluidity, and variation; often used metaphorically to describe openness, unpredictability, and the refusal of fixed boundaries.

In computational space, form can be infinite and unbound, but to exist in the world it must be embodied, finite, and constructed. Making, for me, is the act of negotiating that gap, testing how digital ideas can take on presence beyond the screen.

The alias I chose captures this negotiation. Boolean speaks to clarity, modularity, and logic, while Blur evokes ambiguity, openness, and variation. Design lives between these poles, and my practice is an attempt to hold them in balance.

In practice, I treat each project as a test of this translation. Sometimes that means developing modular systems where repetition creates order without erasing variation. Other times I work through material prototypes, where computational precision meets resistance and unpredictability. I also explore digital conduits such as projection or immersion, where a design takes form as an experience of perception and interaction. Across these approaches, the aim is the same: to let each idea find the form of embodiment it needs.

What unites them is the same question: how does the digital become real? My creative practice is an ongoing search for answers that insists on both complexity and structure, and on discovering what new possibilities can emerge in the passage between screen and world.