Creative Projects
I have a passion for creating digital content. The projects I have worked on are listed below.

Multimedia projects
- Why you should believe my pain (2017/18) – This multimedia project was funded $3,000 by the Harris Fellowship (now known as the Harris Student Award) by the University of Sydney. The project uses a long feature form with photography, videography and other online features to explore how people with invisible disability often experience pain that is ignored by others.
Interviews about invisible disability
- The Disability Paradox (2016) – Features an interview with Professor Gerard Goggin and Professor Katie Ellis.
- Exploring Why We Invisible Disability Shame co-authored with Hong Jiang (2016) – Features an interview with Professor Gerard Goggin and Professor Katie Ellis.
- How Would You Describe Your Invisible Disability? – A photo story that asks people with invisible disability to visually imagine their invisible disability.
- The Invisible Stories co-authored with Hong Jiang (2016)
- The Movement (2016)– Features some of Hannah Laycock’s photography that visually imagines invisible disability.
Conference videos
- Exploring Invisible Disability and Economies of Visibility in the Girls Make Your Move Instagram Campaign (2020) – A video presentation that I featured in, filmed and edited for the 2020 ICA Pre-Conference on ‘Visual Representation and Marginality’.
- Visualising Invisible Disability Inclusion as a Way to Improve Disability Inclusion in Australian Health Media Campaign (2021) – A video presentation that I featured in, filmed and edited for the ANZCA 2021 Conference on ‘Communication, Authority and Power’ for a double panel on the State-of-the-art of disability.
Creative competitions
- How people with invisible disability help us improve our health advice (2021) – Three Minute Thesis competition (University of Sydney Finalist)
- How people with invisible disability help us add the colour back into online health advice (2021) – Visualise Your Thesis Entry
- How people with invisible disability help us improve our health advice (2021) – Three Minute Thesis competition (Winner from the Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney)