Branding & web design from meaning to clarity

An abstract watercolor artwork featuring a blend of black and gray ink splotches and washes on a textured off-white background. The composition includes organic forms and splatters, creating a fluid, expressive feel. The interplay of light and dark tones suggests depth and movement within the piece.
A single leaf with a distinct shape standing tall on a slender stem against a light background.
A close-up image of a single dark leaf, showcasing detailed veins and texture. The leaf is attached to a thin, delicate stem, set against a light, neutral background. The overall tone is monochromatic, emphasizing the leaf's intricate features.
A single, slender rose stem with a few leaves and a closed flower bud, set against a softly blurred, neutral background. The image is predominantly in shades of black and white, highlighting the delicate textures of the leaves and stem.
A minimalist black-and-white photograph featuring two slender plant stems with delicate leaves, positioned against a soft, neutral background. The stems rise vertically, showcasing an elegant simplicity and creating a sense of calm and tranquility. The overall composition emphasizes the natural beauty of the plants, with gentle contrasts and subtle textures.
A monochromatic image featuring a trio of elongated leaves emerging from slender stems, set against a softly lit, textured beige background. The leaves, exhibiting a smooth surface and subtle veins, fan out elegantly, creating a striking contrast with the simple backdrop. The composition exudes a sense of tranquility and minimalism.
An abstract metal sculpture features two sweeping curves that intertwine, creating a dynamic sense of movement. The surface is a textured blend of dark and light tones, reflecting light softly. The background is softly blurred, enhancing the sculpture's elegant form.

I don't design anything until I understand what the brand needs to say and why anyone should care. The scope of a project can vary, but I don't move to visual decisions before that question has a real answer.

Services

Brand identity and packaging design for a skincare product brand

Strategic Branding

A brand does not start with a logo, but with a clear understanding of what a business actually stands for, who it needs to reach, and why those people should choose it over everything else. When that foundation is established before any visual decisions are made, the brand stops requiring explanation.

Website design for a haircare brand built on brand strategy

Strategic Website

A website built before the brand strategy is in place is just an expensive placeholder. When the positioning is clear first, the site becomes a precise argument: the right visitor lands, sees something that reflects their situation exactly, and knows whether this is for them before a single word is read.

Brand collateral design including business card and stationery for a founder brand

Add-ons Design

A brand that only exists on a screen is incomplete. Every physical or digital surface it appears on needs to follow the same logic, not the same aesthetic. When it does, the brand stops requiring someone to explain it at every new touchpoint and starts communicating on its own.

Featured Works

David the founder of DAV.(RIL) STUDIO

about

Brand & Web Design Studio

Led by David Gabriel

I work with founders around the world who already understand the role branding plays in business. These people are looking for a thoughtful, strategic approach to building something with long-term value.


WHAT MAKES MY APPROACH DIFFERENT
· Nothing gets designed until the strategy is completely resolved. Before making any visual decisions, I focus on establishing what the brand needs to communicate, who it needs to reach, and why those people should choose it, ensuring that every design decision connects back to that foundation.


· The same person who asks the first strategic question is the one who delivers the final file. This approach eliminates handoffs, account managers, and those moments where the core thinking from one stage fails to carry into the next.


· This process has been refined across more than 80 projects. In practice, that experience translates to fewer wrong turns, faster clarity, and a much clearer sense of what the brand actually needs before the creative work even begins.

What Clients Say

Before You Begin

What's the difference between a logo and a brand identity?

A logo is one small mark inside a much larger visual system. Brand identity is that system: the visual language, the typography, the color logic, the way everything holds together before a word is read. But brand identity is only what people see. Branding goes deeper, into the meaning behind the business, the strategy that shapes every decision, and the emotional logic that makes people feel something before they understand why, and choose before they've asked a single question.

Should I hire a freelance designer or a branding agency?

The question of freelancer versus agency often resolves itself when you ask something more specific: who will actually be in the room with your brand, from the first strategic conversation to the moment the final file is delivered. Large agencies distribute that work across strategists, designers, and account managers, and the vision that enters one end of the process rarely exits the other end unchanged. When one person carries the thinking all the way through like at DAV.(RIL) STUDIO, something different happens: the brand that launches is the same one that was conceived, with nothing diluted and nothing lost between handoffs.

How do I stop competing on price and get clients to see why I'm worth more?

Price resistance is almost always a positioning problem, not a sales problem. When a brand doesn't clearly communicate who it's for and why it exists, clients default to comparing on price because they have nothing else to compare. A brand built on strategy gives people a reason to choose you before the conversation even starts. The right clients arrive already convinced, the price holds without negotiation, and selling starts to feel like pointing.

How do I look established and credible enough to compete with bigger players?

A brand that knows exactly who it speaks to, what it stands for, and how to carry that consistently across every surface will feel more established than a company ten times its size that hasn't done the same work. That recognition happens before people check your team size, your years in business, or your client list. When the brand is built right, the question of how you compare to bigger players stops coming up, because the right people have already decided.

How do I justify the branding spend when I haven't made money yet?

When a brand isn't working, the cost rarely shows up as a line item. It shows up in leads that felt promising and went quiet, in pricing conversations that stalled, in clients who chose someone else without quite explaining why. Building a brand right from the start is the work of removing those frictions before they happen. When the brand is clear, the right people arrive already oriented, the price holds without justification, and the energy that used to go into convincing goes somewhere more useful.

The work you have built deserves a brand that reflects its value, and this is where I begin that process.