Great design should feel invisible.
Transforming imagination into stunning visual realities through the intersection of art and design.
Visual identity, layout, and design systems — for brands that want to stand out and stay consistent
Built for brands that wanted more than just "nice"




I'm Imtiaz, an artist first, and a law student by a peculiar twist of academic fate. I live for creating things that speak for themselves: environmental art, interactive installations, designs that break the silence and demand attention without asking for permission. The kind of work that doesn't need a placard explaining what it means; it just is, and you feel it. There's something intoxicating about designing spaces and experiences that transform how people move through the world, art that breathes, that provokes, that exists as its own argument.
Now, here's where it gets interesting: I study law, and I've come to a profound realization that the pursuit of justice through legal systems is precisely the same as seeking justice through art. Both demand evidence. Both require an audience willing to look closely. Both insist on being heard. The only difference? Art doesn't need a courtroom, and the law doesn't need to be beautiful, though it certainly should be. Obviously, I'm only partially serious.
What I actually believe is this: creative expression and legal reasoning aren't opposites. They're different languages for the same human need, to create meaning, to challenge injustice, to leave something behind that matters. So I make art that refuses to whisper, I study law that might one day whisper back, and somewhere in between, I'm building something uniquely mine.