By Julia de Schultz, February 4, 2026

I have a little pinch-me moment to share.
After winning a London Design Award, Muse.World interviewed me about Ray of Light Prints, the story behind the work, and the idea that started it all.
“I wanted to explore what would happen if learning wasn’t something we consumed briefly, but something we lived alongside.”
That sentence is basically the heart of what I do — creating prints that don’t just decorate a space, but quietly bring perspective, wonder, and meaning into everyday life.
The Muse.World interview
In the interview, I share what it really means (to me) to translate knowledge into design — not dumbing it down, but shaping it into something calm, human, and liveable.
“The Evolution of the Universe print was never meant to be fast or loud.”
We talk about the award-winning piece, the slow and careful process behind it, and why I believe there’s value in designing with meaning at the centre.
👉 Read the full interview on Muse.World here.
Why I started Ray of Light Prints
Ray of Light Prints grew from a simple, personal desire: to keep what matters close.
So much knowledge lives in books or documentaries — beautiful, powerful things that can change you — and then life moves on and it fades. I wanted to build something that makes learning feel present. Something you can return to, glance at, and remember.
What people don’t see in the design process
A calm final design often hides a lot of invisible work — the pruning, refining, experimenting, and deciding what not to include.
“Good design often hides its own effort.”
That’s especially true with my work, because the goal is always clarity without losing depth — whether the subject is cosmic history, the intelligence of the human body, or the building blocks of life.
If you’re new here, start with this piece
The interview centres around my award-winning print, The Evolution of the Universe — a piece designed to invite reflection, perspective, and connection.

If you’d like to explore it:
- Shop: The Evolution of the Universe
- Or browse the full collection
Thank you for being here
Being featured is exciting — but what matters most to me is the quiet ripple effect: these prints ending up in real homes, becoming part of daily life, and offering something steady to return to.
If you read the interview, I’d love to know: what part resonated most?
👉 Read the full Muse.World interview here.