Building websites that work for everyone.
Fast, accessible, and built to perform—for humans and search engines.
When I build websites, I don’t just aim for visual appeal—I design and develop with intention. Every line of code I write considers how quickly pages load, how easily users can navigate the experience, and how well search engines can understand and rank the content.
Performance and accessibility aren’t just checkboxes—they’re the foundation of a website that truly works for everyone, everywhere.
The screenshots that follow show the results of the homepage from Google’s Lighthouse report—an industry-standard tool that evaluates websites across four key areas: Performance, Accessibility, Best Practices, and SEO. Scoring high in these areas is more than bragging rights; it’s a signal that your site is technically sound, inclusive, and set up to succeed.
Mobile Scores: Perfect 100s
On mobile, where performance can be the most challenging, this site scores 100 across the board—including Performance, Accessibility, Best Practices, and SEO. This means users get a fast-loading, user-friendly experience that’s accessible and discoverable, even on slower mobile connections.

Desktop Scores: Also 100%
On desktop, the story is the same—perfect scores. This shows that my frontend development is responsive, consistent, and thoughtfully structured to deliver a high-quality experience no matter the screen size.

⚠️ Disclaimer (because even perfect websites live in the real world):
While these scores are a great benchmark, not every project can (or should) chase that perfect 100. Sometimes, we intentionally invite tools like Google Analytics or third-party scripts to the party—even if they leave a little JavaScript lying around. Trade-offs happen. The goal is always a thoughtful balance between performance and purpose.