Queen Pelican Timeline – UX Design Warrior
About Cara Harpole

Born in New Orleans.
Built in Austin.

The UX Warrior character

I don't fit in a box — and I stopped trying. I have my own ecosystem: design, strategy, technology, storytelling, advocacy. Each part feeds the others.

Beignets from Cafe du Monde, New Orleans
Café du Monde · New Orleans

When I think of home, I think of beignets from Café du Monde — powdered sugar, hot coffee, the Mississippi a block away. New Orleans taught me that everything worth doing has soul behind it.

Austin Texas postcard
Austin · Texas

The Gulf Coast has a way of teaching you that things fall apart and get rebuilt. Austin is where the career took shape — and where the work became a system.

The Brand
UX Design Warrior — bot and shield representing convergence of design and technology

Good design is a principle,
not a deliverable.

The warrior character and the shield represent my convergence of design and technology. UX Design Warrior was built around one belief — that standing on good design means holding that standard even when no one is watching.

A2Symmetry website — inclusive accessible design
A2Symmetry logo A2Symmetry

Symmetry means balance.
Balance is not optional.

A2Symmetry was created to advocate for inclusive, accessible design. Access to symmetry — because every user deserves the same experience, regardless of ability.

The Frameworks

To keep my work consistent and intentional, I created CDP — Cara's Design Protocol — a personal framework that governs every design decision I make. And to evaluate websites as interconnected systems rather than isolated pages, I built CEWQI — Cara's Extensive Web Quality Index.

These aren't tools I picked up. They're frameworks I built because nothing else existed that worked the way I think.

Origin Story

The Making of Queen Pelican

2010

The Gulf Changes Everything

The Deepwater Horizon disaster hit differently when you're from Louisiana. Watching oil coat the brown pelican — the state bird — made the crisis feel personal. It pushed me to ask: what if the products we use every day didn't carry this cost?

Pelicans affected by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
BP oil spill cleanup at Port Fourchon, Louisiana 2010
Port Fourchon, Louisiana

The Inspiration for Eco-Cleaning

Port Fourchon. The cleanup. The images were impossible to look away from. The brown pelican is more than a symbol — it's a reminder of what's at stake when design and commerce ignore their impact on the world.

The Concept

A Brand Takes Shape

Queen Pelican began as an idea for eco-friendly household and cleaning products — alternatives safer for homes and better for the environment. The pelican became the mascot: a symbol of resilience and conscious choice. The brand existed before UX had a name for what I was doing.

Queen Pelican brand mascot
Early Queen Pelican concept sketch
Early Sketches

Structure Before the Tools

The first flows came from instinct — hand-drawn, rough, and already thinking about how users would move through an experience. Architecture and drafting precision showing up long before I had the vocabulary to call it information architecture.

2017 — Capstone

The Capstone Didn't Create It

When I entered UX, I didn't invent a fictional product for my capstone. I used Queen Pelican — a concept already years in the making. The program gave it research methods, personas, and usability testing. It gave structure to something that already had soul.

Early Queen Pelican high-fidelity landing page design
Queen Pelican 2D animation video thumbnail
Explaining UX

A Video Before There Was a Playbook

Early on, I produced a 2D animated video to explain what UX Design actually means — because most people had no idea. I scripted it, designed the characters, composed the music, and edited it myself. It wasn't an assignment. It was a gap I saw and filled.

Some ideas are worth staying with.

Queen Pelican is one of them.