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Proud Uncle Alert – Sabrina Feld

Feb 27, 2026
Category Personal
Homepage of Sabrina Feld featuring a bold introduction, a grid of vibrant artwork, and a brief description of her studies at Scripps College.

My brother Daniel sent an email to the family last Wednesday with the subject line “Proud Dad alert!” His daughter Sabrina had just built and launched a portfolio website from scratch. She didn’t use Squarespace or Wix. She built a custom Next.js site with scroll-triggered animations, a frosted glass navigation header, a custom image carousel with lightbox, and six page templates – all self-hosted on Netlify.

Sabrina is a senior at Scripps College pursuing dual degrees in Science, Technology & Society and Fine Arts. She’s a product designer and fine artist – not a software developer. She built the entire thing using Claude Code.


She wrote a blog post about the process, describing what it’s like to direct an AI when you don’t know CSS. She “had to get precise in other ways” – using design vocabulary and visual references instead of code snippets. When bugs appeared, she described symptoms and shared screenshots rather than reading stack traces.

A line that stuck with me: “Vague prompts produced generic designs. Clear creative conviction produced something that felt like mine.”

This matches what I see building with Claude Code every day. The quality of the output tracks directly with the specificity of the input. “Make this look better” gives you something generic. “I want warm tones, editorial layout, and a buttercup accent color for hover states” gives you something that looks like a real design decision was made. Sabrina’s version of this was arriving at each session with strong opinions about what she wanted – gathered design references, prepared content, and a clear vision for the aesthetic.

She did over twenty feedback sessions across an eleven-day build, with about four to six hours of active work. The AI didn’t eliminate iteration. It made each round faster.


Go look at the site. Her art section showcases monotype, pastel, watercolor, and cyanotype work. The projects section covers her product management work at StackHawk, including a product launch she led end-to-end and research for an AI-driven security testing tool. The design is clean and typography-focused, with a dark footer and those buttercup accent colors she specified.

After I saw the site, I did what any uncle who is a nerd would do – I ran a security review. The results were solid. TLS configuration is correct, no sensitive files exposed, no source maps in production, and HTTP redirects to HTTPS correctly. I sent Sabrina a list of security headers to add and some DNS records worth configuring – about ten minutes of work that addresses the findings.


Sabrina is looking for roles in product design and product management after graduation this spring. Her portfolio is at sabrinafeld.com.