
My Work
During college, I have had an opportunity to experiment with multiple projects centered around the media context. Here are some of my experiences that I would like to showcase. All of my work has immensely added skill sets, enabling me to work more professionally and productively.
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- I graduated from Mahidol University International College, Majoring in Media and Communication, concentrating in Journalism.

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01
Your Ivy Grows Thesis
This sapphic multimedia storytelling website campaign aims to promote and generate more than awareness but an understanding of the LGBTQIA+ community about love and pink capitalism as well as entertaining the audiences. This thesis desires to demonstrate to the readers that any kind of love is indifferent through the emotions of the protagonist. There was and is no extraordinary kind of affection or pain that was separated from what a typical heterosexual love would be, but only the way society makes them to be, to be ‘different,’ to be not ‘normal,’ and to not be worthy of the same rights as other humans as if they are any other kind who is more supreme than them. Furthermore, this project aims to disrupt the wall of obsession with the gay community and how they are the victim of the entertainment media, as after all, we do not need to scream to be heard and love is love.
02
Project Manager for Thesis Exhibition (event management) and Senior Head
In my last year of college, I have been working as a senior head for my major and a project manager for the thesis exhibition. I developed an intense leadership role from this fantastic opportunity which included various complications that I have to resolve and eventually overcome. Working with people, especially in an international university has provided me with life-long experiences, mindset, and real-world encounters that I will be able to utilize in my occupation.

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03
Breaking fashion boundaries with Nice Orsuwan

In the present day, the fashion industry has been more open and accepting of various types of fashion not only for those who are in the industry itself but also for normal people who live their everyday life.
We are now seeing individuals starting to break the barrier of fashion stereotypes about feminine clothing and masculine clothing and not just about the unisex wardrobe.
Women wear suits and men paint their nails, something that has continuously been normalized.
This refers to the people who desire to think outside the box and just wear whatever they want and it does not change who they are.
Nevertheless, even though society is more open-minded about some masculine traits onfemales and vice versa, it is just a little concept of it.
People accept the little actions or concepts of breaking the barrier but they still find it weird and strange if a man dressed in high heels and skirts in their everyday life, they might even think that those people must be gay and want to feel feminine but that is not true.
Sure, people who identified themselves as the opposite of their birth gender often desire to dress up and feel like they are themselves, which is normal.
But that is not the case, our goal is to normalize and try down the barrier of the fashion stereotype.
Men can wear high heels and skirts too, without them being gay (which again no problem with being LGBTQ+) but the thing is you can wear anything you want without the barrier of the feminine object belonging to women and masculine object belonging to men.
04
Aesthetic of a woman
Being a woman has no one meaning. We are powerful, kind, assertive, gentle, fierce, soft, and many more. Being a woman is being an individual, we have our voice, our position in this world. How we present ourselves to society depends on our attitude. In this photoshoot, I asked my friend, Pauline Sinha to be the project’s model to illustrate the aesthetic of a woman. Our aesthetic is represented by our attitude, not our clothes or makeup.
