Ruby Ross-HayesDesign Portfoliorubyrose.rosshayes@gmail.com

Kia Ora, 
I’m Ruby Ross-Hayes

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I recently graduted from Toi Rauwhārangi, Massey University with a Bachelor of Design with first-class honours,majoring in Visual Communication Design. As a flexible and detail-oriented designer, I love crafting meaningful visual experiences that connect with audiences. I am a proactive and positive person with a can-do attitude. I’m really drawn to creative problem solving and the way design can communicate complex ideas in clear and engaging ways. I have a strong interest in typography, editorial design and branding, and have enjoyed building my skills across these areas. In 2025 I was awarded with Merit a member of the International Society of Typographic Designers (ISTD).

I love the details of design and how small decisions build up to create a bigger picture. I enjoy incorporating tactile elements into my work, particularly as we move further into a digital age, embracing the mistakes and emotion that hands-on design creates. In recent years, this has taken the form of printmaking and bookbinding.

I value communication highly and incorporate this into all areas of my life. I love learning new things, which is why I enjoy working in collaborative environments where you can give and recive constructive feedback, growing together.


Check out my work 


2025Honours ProjectEditorial Design

Scans of Designed Dissent
Embossed front cover
A slection of spreasds from Designed Dissent
One of many tip-ins 

Designed 
Dissent


My Honours project, Designed Dissent, is an editorial design project that celebrates Aotearoa’s nuclear-free movement through the protest ephemera it left behind. While researching the history of nuclear-free protests in Aotearoa, I began to uncover a wide range of posters, badges, and other forms of ephemera. I was struck by how clearly these objects demonstrated the relationship between design and protest, and surprised that, as a young designer, I had encountered so little of this material before.

Much of this ephemera was scattered across different online archives, and lacked the sufficient historical or design context, making it difficult to fully understand their significance. This gap became the catalyst for my project. Through editorial design, I brought together the visual language of protest with the historical context, highlighting the role of design in activism. Using bold, uplifting colour, interviews with designers and activists, and a call to create new protest ephemera, the book connects past movements with the present, encouraging young designers to see protest as powerful and relevant today.

This was designed, printed, and bound by myself.  

2025ISTD  Student Assesment  SchemeExpressive Typography | Editorial Design

Photo of How Spectacular!
Details of How Spectacular!
A selection of spreads from Book One 
A selection of spreads from Book Two

How Spectacular!




How Spectactular! explores the milestones within the invention and evolution of eyeglasses. It was designed for the Milestones brief for the International Society of Typographic Designers Student Assesment scheme. Where it was awarded a Merit. 

The main concepts explored in the book are vision, blur and focus. The artefact consists of two Coptic bound small books, joined together with a ribbon. The coptic binding references the hinges of glasses. The books are small and feel delicate, reflecting the small size of glasses and their transportable yet fragile nature. The ribbon that connects the book references the use of ribbon to affix glasses to one’s head before the invention of temple arms. When the artefact is open, it subtly references a pair of glasses, the two books represent the lenses with the ribbon acting as side arms and a nose bridge. On the cover, using a combination of embossing and printing, the word ‘spectacular’ is split to play with the idea of focus and vision. 

Book One explores the invention of eyeglasses from 1100 to 1700, while Book Two focuses on eyeglasses from 1800 to the present day. This period followed the Industrial Revolution, which marked a significant turning point in eyeglass development. The two display typefaces used reference the eras covered within the two books.

The sections in the books are split into decades; the display typefaces reflect the decades, and the decade numbers also begin blurred, getting clearer over time, reflecting the developments in eyeglasses. The 0’s in the decades are also connected by a ‘nose bridge’ custom ligature, turning them into glasses.  

The book is printed on 80gsm Zeta Paper to incorporate qualities of ‘show through’, playing with the idea of vision. In Book One, on pages 11 and 25, I utilise the transparency of the paper to further explore the idea of bringing things into focus. The top pages only highlight the letters that spell out the type of glasses, while the text underneath provides a few sentences about the invention of the glasses.

    2024Fictional CampaignUX Design | Motion Graphics | Brand Design 

    A user scanning a Greenling instalation on the app
    Promotional video for The Green Escape 
    Social Media promotion for The Green Escape
    Posters for The Green Escape
    Walkthrough of some of the features on The Green Escape App
    Greenling Installation Mockup 
    Greenling Installation Mockup
    The inital app walkthrough that introduces users to the narrativce and their challange 

    The Green Escape



    The Green Escape is a month-long campaign in Wellington that is designed to encourage young adults to walk outdoors through gamification, habit-building, and storytelling. The narrative follows the escape of Greenlings from Count Gorse’s grasp, with participants tasked to find them across the city.  The campaign includes posters, teaser content, installations, a promotional video, and an app. This was a collaborative project with Zoe Stringer.


    2024/5Canva ‘Brand Design’ InternshipApparal Design | Illustration | Typography

    A few of the t-shirt designs 
    More playful t-shirt designs

    Canva Internal Merch Redesign



    I worked with two other designers to create new and updated merchandise for the internal Canva Staff during my summer internship as a Brand Designer. This merch was designed to reflect Canva’s creative, fun and playful values, using the Canva core brand colours and tone of voice.

    ‘You have a great ability to bring fresh and creative ideas to the table, which I saw particularly in the context of the Canva branding and swag direction.’ – Ben McQueen


    Contact

     

    Email: rubyrose.rosshayes@gmail.com
    Intstagram: ruby.makes.stuff