
Trinity’s work lives in a space where animals and imagination meet. Wolves are her favorite starting point, but from there, anything can happen.
Dragon-wolf hybrids. Snake-bat creatures. Alicorns, which she describes as a mix between a unicorn and a Pegasus.
Her art isn’t about staying inside lines, it’s about creating entirely new ones.
“I like that I can actually send my imagination flying.”
That sense of freedom shows up in everything she creates. Some pieces are playful, some carry deeper meaning, and some come with full backstories sparked by everyday moments, like the accidental creation of her “Easter Wolf.”
Trinity has been drawing for about four years, starting with Pokémon sketches and gradually building her own style.
Like many artists, getting started can be the hardest part.
“Once I start, I can’t stop. But starting is hard.”
She’s currently pushing herself into new territory, adding more detail and experimenting with shading, growing her skills one piece at a time.
Her tools are simple and accessible, colored pencils, markers, and a tablet, but what she creates with them is anything but simple.
For Trinity, art is more than expression. It’s also a path forward.
She shared something that many people don’t often hear:
“The job hiring rate for autistics is sadly not super high. So by selling my art, I can at least produce myself a little bit of income.”
Her business didn’t start from a traditional path. It came from necessity, creativity, and support from her mom, who helped bring her designs onto products like shirts, mugs, and car coasters.
That support matters, but so does ownership.
Even with guidance behind the scenes, this is Trinity’s business, her ideas, her creations, her direction.
Trinity’s art is tied closely to how she sees the world and how she hopes others will see it too.
“It’s important to me because it allows… I’m hoping it’ll send the message that we may be different, but we’re not broken.”
That message sits at the heart of her work, but it’s not the only thing her art offers.
She also hopes people feel something simpler:
“Happiness.”
And that balance matters. Not every piece has to carry a heavy meaning. Some are just fun. Some are just beautiful. Some are just imagination, fully unleashed.
Trinity’s mom, Robin, shared something that adds important context to her journey.
Support systems for autistic individuals, especially adults, are limited. After years of working through programs designed to help with employment, they found themselves without clear opportunities.
That’s part of what led to building Trinity’s business.
It’s also why accessibility, flexibility, and encouragement matter so much, not just from families, but from platforms, communities, and customers.
Because talent is there. Creativity is there. The opportunity often isn’t.
When asked what they hope people take away from this interview, Trinity’s answer was simple and direct:
“That us autistics mean just as much as everyone else.”
Her mom added something that expands on that idea:
“Awareness is great, but what we really need is acceptance and understanding and love.”
Trinity is an artist who loves wolves, trains a miniature horse named Napoleon, experiments with hybrids that don’t exist anywhere else, and is constantly growing her skills.
This interview shows a piece of that.
Just a piece.
And we’re excited to see everything that comes next.