Before we dive into color palettes or type, we get clear on what you’re building, who it’s for, and why it matters. We make sure we’re creating something that tells your brand story and connects with the people you want to reach.
We’re not just here to make things pretty. We’ll ask smart questions, challenge when it helps, and walk you through the key decisions. Our process keeps things moving so you always know what’s next (and feel good about it).
Beautiful is a given. We design flexible, scalable brand systems that are ready to launch, easy to use, and built to grow with your business.
Your brand launch is just the start. Whether you need a website, packaging, fun merch, or something unexpected, we’re your brand’s design partners. We’ll put your brand system to work anywhere you need it, from digital, to print, to in person.
We’re Serra and Taylor: designers, sisters, and co-founders. We bring sharp thinking, strong visuals, and smart instincts to help your brand show up with confidence.
Clients come to us for strategy-led, beautiful design, but they stick around because they find that working with us is smooth, collaborative, and (dare we say) actually fun.
We’ve been teaming up since childhood—putting on talent shows no one asked for, losing at computer games while the other offered emotional support, and very cautiously rollerblading in the driveway. These days, that lifelong collaboration shows up as creative shorthand, honest feedback, and a shared sense of purpose that makes the work better.
With a graphic designer mom, entrepreneurial parents, and advertising degrees from the University of Georgia (go Dawgs), building a brand studio together felt like kismet. Now we push each other creatively and obsess over the details so your brand feels like the best version of itself.
Serra is a designer who loves clean grids, nicely kerned type, and a well-formatted spreadsheet (you’ll probably get one from her). She a big sister through and through—she’s going to try to fix it, organize it, or keep it on track. When she’s not in the studio, she’s probably cooking something too ambitious for a Tuesday night, taking a Pilates class, or curling up with a good book. You may spot her chasing her toddler around Westside Atlanta with her husband, lavender latte in hand. She’s outdoorsy in that she enjoys a tajin-rimmed margarita and guac-loaded chips on a well-shaded patio.
Taylor is a brand designer who thrives on bold fonts and bright colors, and will probably make it a little retro if she can (and she usually can). After a few cross-country moves, she and her family have finally settled down in Atlanta for good. She has two toddler daughters, one husband, and zero pets. Outside of office hours, she’s probably journaling with a satisfyingly smooth pen, trying to convince herself to learn how to sew, or eating more chocolate than any adult should. She ditched her Apple Watch years ago and writes exclusively in cursive now—some kind of nostalgic yearning for simpler times, probably. She’s just an old soul getting older.
Serra is a designer who loves clean grids, nicely kerned type, and a well-formatted spreadsheet (you’ll probably get one from her). She a big sister through and through—she’s going to try to fix it, organize it, or keep it on track. When she’s not in the studio, she’s probably cooking something too ambitious for a Tuesday night, taking a Pilates class, or curling up with a good book. You may spot her chasing her toddler around Westside Atlanta with her husband, lavender latte in hand. She’s outdoorsy in that she enjoys a tajin-rimmed margarita and guac-loaded chips on a well-shaded patio.
Taylor is a brand designer who thrives on bold fonts and bright colors, and will probably make it a little retro if she can (and she usually can). After a few cross-country moves, she and her family have finally settled down in Atlanta for good. She has two toddler daughters, one husband, and zero pets. Outside of office hours, she’s probably journaling with a satisfyingly smooth pen, trying to convince herself to learn how to sew, or eating more chocolate than any adult should. She ditched her Apple Watch years ago and writes exclusively in cursive now—some kind of nostalgic yearning for simpler times, probably. She’s just an old soul getting older.