Industrial design portfolio for ambitious brands
This industrial design portfolio shows what I love doing most:
turning company ideas into real products. From mobility and medical devices
to wearables, consumer products and experimental futures. Every project is different,
but the thread is always the same: looking carefully, listening well and designing for the people
who will actually use the product.
In this industrial design portfolio you will find projects in mobility, medical, wearables, robotics and
experimental futures, all designed from the same combination of creativity and manufacturability.
My process combines analogue and digital design. I often start with fast hand-drawn sketches,
develop them into 3D CAD and, where needed, create 3D printed prototypes. When useful, I use AI
to explore variants and visual directions in the early phase. Not as random pretty images, but as
visuals that support technology, ergonomics, product development and production.
Are you working on a new product, a redesign or a private-label product line, and looking for an industrial designer who thinks along about form, function and manufacturability?
Then you are in the right place. From my studio in the Haarlem region, I work for clients in the Netherlands and abroad.
Curious what this could mean for your product? Explore the cases and get in touch for a short introduction.
Together we can define the process that best fits your plans and turn your idea into a tangible product.
I often use this industrial design portfolio in conversations with new clients to show how an idea grows from first sketch to working prototype.
For a broader view of the design profession, you can also visit the Association of Dutch Designers (BNO).
Want to develop a product like this?
Do you want to turn your idea into a concrete design process? Use the services configurator to define your product development project in a few steps.
Frequently asked questions about my industrial design portfolio
Which projects do you show here?
In this industrial design portfolio I show a selection of projects that I am allowed to publish and where the story can be clearly told. Part of my work in product development is confidential, for example because of patents, medical regulations or sensitive market introductions. I discuss those projects one-to-one, not publicly on the website.
What type of products do you design?
I mainly work on products where technology, use and form come together: mobility, vehicles, trailers, components, medical & wearables, orthoses, assistive products, health tech, robotics, mechatronics and high-end consumer products. This portfolio shows examples from several of those areas.
Do you use AI in your design process?
Yes, but always with the designer in the loop. I use AI to quickly explore variants, build moodboards and make complexity visible in the early phase of product development. Decisions about form, construction, ergonomics and manufacturability are made by me, based on experience and in close dialogue with the client. AI is a tool, not a replacement for industrial design.
What is Kodama?
Kodama is my own design assistant: an internal system that brings together my design methodology, AI tools and knowledge. It helps structure projects, clarify decisions and create strong visuals faster. For clients, this results in a clearer process, better reasoning and a well-documented product development journey.
Do you only work on large projects?
No. Sometimes the assignment is a compact design review or product update, and sometimes it is a longer process from first idea to prototype. In a short introduction, we determine whether you need a fresh design perspective or a complete development process with sketches, 3D CAD and support towards production partners.
What if my product is technically or medically complex?
That often makes it especially interesting. I have experience with projects where ergonomics, medical requirements, regulations and complex forms or constructions play a major role. If something falls outside my expertise, I will say so honestly and help think about the right partners. The goal is always the same: a design that looks strong, is manufacturable and works in practice.