I'm a media designer and media engineering student from Nuremberg – and I kinda love robots, as you will see further down.
Sadly, not nearly enough time to build this whole thing properly and keep it updated – but I’m working on it. These are just a few excerpts, definitely not everything. If you’ve got questions, feel free to write me an email. I’d be happy to show a bit more in a meeting.
Tools come and go – that’s the price of staying up to date. This is just a snapshot of what I’m using right now; it looked very different not too long ago.
My journey into the working world – during school and after – took me through a variety of jobs, e.g. working security at sports events and concerts, in a beverage store, in a stationery shop with postal services, in a plant nursery, and even a short detour into financial consulting. It allowed me to explore completely different fields and take something valuable from each of them.
After exploring many paths, I finally found my place in media design – completing a three-year
apprenticeship at NUREG GmbH alongside vocational school. Working with well-known clients,
I handled product photography and post-production, professional image retouching,
graphic creation such as route maps and illustrations, and designed a wide range of print products:
menus, posters and billboards of all sizes, brochures, magazines, and more.
On the digital side, I created app concepts, worked with databases and CMS systems,
built newsletters, designed HTML banners and GIFs for sports events, and produced animations and videos for different formats and use cases.
In vocational school, I strengthened the theoretical and conceptual part of the job:
design principles, typography, color theory, brand and style guides, layout systems,
web and interface design, media law, production workflows, costing and project planning –
everything needed to bring ideas into the real world, both digital and print.
After discovering how much I enjoyed automating repetitive tasks during my apprenticeship,
I wanted to go deeper into tech and programming. So I decided to study
Media Engineering – a mix of design, engineering basics and software development.
As a working student, I first joined Fraunhofer IIS in corporate communications and later Evocortex, a robotics startup.
I worked on diverse projects – from an interactive beer pong table to a gesture-controlled drone flying through an obstacle course –
but one thing remained constant: being part of the RoboCup @Work team.
For quite some time now, I’ve been working at EduArt Robotik, handling everything related to media, communication,
marketing and a growing entry into software development around the robot. I built the website, created all product
sheets, photos, videos and animations, designed the roll-up banners for trade fairs, maintained the social media
channels, produced company presentations, training tutorials and even hologram displays for exhibitions.
In short – I shape the entire outward-facing visual identity.
For more information:
eduart-robotik.de.
Since the work I did for EduArt got great feedback (and curious clients asking for more), I started freelancing on the side – taking on smaller or larger projects depending on how generously life schedules me. From photo editing, print design and 3D visuals to websites, simple apps and consulting – if it has pixels, paper or a problem to solve, I’m in.
Below is where I learned the stuff I know today. Not just there, I also learned a lot by doing – and by failing.
Nuremberg, 09 / 2007 – 05 / 2016
Abitur 2016
Final grade: 3.0
B. Sc. Biology
Minor subjects: Physics, Chemistry
Erlangen, 10 / 2017 – 08 / 2018
Media Designer for Digital and Print Media
Specialization: Design & Technology
Nuremberg, 09 / 2018 – 07 / 2021
Final grade: 1.2
B. Eng. Media Engineering
Nuremberg, since 10 / 2021
Working across so many fields taught me something no single course ever could: design, tech, marketing and robotics aren't separate worlds – they’re puzzle pieces. And I love being the person who sees how they fit.
In university I learned the reason behind that: ADHD. I didn’t build a wide range of skills because it sounded clever – it’s simply how my brain works best. If a project sparks excitement, I deep-focus and dive in for weeks. And with experience (and a few chaotic semesters later), I’ve become pretty good at estimating how much time that “ADHD focus mode” actually needs.
No amount of money ever bought a second of time.– Tony Stark
That quote sums up my approach: I want to enjoy the work I do. And yes – sometimes that means investing more hours than planned to get it truly right. Anyone can quickly put something together, but rushed work always returns – twice. Future-proof solutions are better for me, better for you, and better for the project.
I’m no longer “just the designer.” I’m a Media Engineer – and I care about the full picture: design, functionality, user experience, scalability, consistency. I don’t want something that only looks good – I want something that works, lasts and grows with you.
I’m honest and direct. If something feels unnecessary, expensive, or doesn’t make sense – I’ll say so before we walk in circles. I’m not the type who quietly executes every change only to undo it later; I’d rather discuss the impact upfront so your time and budget go where they matter.
And because clear communication saves everyone a headache: I do appreciate having things in writing. It makes planning faster and tracking easier. Thanks to my Obsidian-powered second brain, nothing gets lost – every task finds its place.
If you have an idea, send it through – whether short, long or chaotic. We’ll figure out together what’s possible and whether we’re a fit.