I chose this project because I had the most fun with it during my sophomore year. It aligned with my vision perfectly, and I had a lot of fun with it because I had a lot of creative freedom. I turned this zine into a website because I saw it functioning as something both aesthetically pleasing and educational. Truthfully, I did this because I wanted to have fun with it. Not everything needs to have meaning — and it’s girly pop, boots!
I was pretty ambitious with my paper wireframes. I had a lot of different ideas and wish I could have applied them all to my final. I wanted the website to feel very editorial and magazine-like. And yeah, hella pink. At the time, I wasn’t sure what colors I wanted to use, but the placement was there.






I love playing with Figma, so this part of the project was pretty fun. I kept going back and forth with color, but I’m overall pretty happy with he ones I chose. I did have to chnage up the colors for my About Page, since they were contrasting pretty badly. I also had to remove a lot of stuff, because WordPress is actually really annoying.
Overall, I’m happy with my final site… but only on Desktop. WordPress is interesting, but not my favorite and I never want to touch it again. Anyway, I think my final site is very cutesy and hyper-feminine, and it’s everything the zine would be is it were ever turned into a website. I also just like how I was able to make it super fun instead of a corporate nightmare.
In conclusion, this was supposed to be made for desktop only. It was really interesting turning my zine into a website. I liked how my Figma mockup turned out and would’ve stopped it there. I enjoyed making the archive posts and adding things that weren’t in my original mockup. In the future, I would never touch WordPress again and probably pay someone else to do it for me. Or code it myself.