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Cam Green: Merging Tech and Art to Redefine Creativity

Creativity Meets Identity


Cam Green stands at the crossroads of innovation and artistry. A senior at North Carolina A&T State University, majoring in Computer Graphics Technology, Cam is carving out a space in the creative world that merges design, identity, and social relevance. Their brand, CXM: Creative x Mind, is more than a name—it’s a personal manifesto.


Originally a username, CXM evolved into a design studio that functions as Cam’s creative alter ego and business identity. Through this brand, they’ve become a force in UX design, photography, branding, and visual storytelling. “It started as just an idea,” Cam shares, “but it became a movement.”


Cam Green

The Roots of a Vision

Cam’s journey began with curiosity and trial. In high school, they gravitated toward digital art tools, eventually landing at A&T with a passion to turn creativity into a career. Early projects were deeply personal—expression through aesthetic. A turning point came while selling posters at Greensboro’s Common Grounds coffee shop. “It wasn’t just about money,” they explain. “It was about someone looking at my work and connecting with it.”


That small booth turned into the spark for something much larger.


Style, Substance, and Signature

CXM’s design language fuses minimalism with brutalism—clean, modern design with raw, unfiltered edge. Their work features bold typography, monochrome palettes, and embedded phrases—a hidden network of poetic microtexts that tie each piece to the next. These aren’t just visuals; they’re layered stories.


“I like hiding messages in plain sight,” Cam says. “Design should be experienced, not just seen.”


This approach is intentional. As a queer Black woman in tech and art, Cam’s identity fuels their work. “I exist in multiple margins,” they explain. “That means my work speaks for people who don’t always get heard.”


Creative Process and Ritual

Cam’s inspiration comes from everyday experiences. Product packaging, 2000s web aesthetics, even wine bottle labels spark ideas. “Most concepts come to me in my sleep,” they say. “I wake up, grab my phone, and put it in Google Keep.”


Their workflow is a blend of spontaneous capture and structured creation—using tools like Adobe Illustrator for posters and Figma for UX design. But they’re also deliberate about rest and rhythm. “I don’t believe in overworking for the sake of being busy,” Cam notes. “You have to leave room for reflection.”


Photography as a Language

Photography became part of Cam’s portfolio more recently, but it now holds equal weight. Their black-and-white compositions often feature quiet moments—movement in stillness, emotion in silence. “Street photography lets me document the rhythm of life,” they say. “There’s poetry in what people overlook.”


These photos have become part of CXM’s broader narrative—visual essays on Black life, joy, and presence.

Cam Green

Teaching, Leading, Building

Though still in school, Cam is already mentoring younger creatives. They’ve spoken on panels, critiqued portfolios, and offered guidance to students seeking a voice in the design world. “It feels wild to be a role model,” they admit, “but if my journey opens doors for someone else, I’m doing it right.”


CXM is not just about personal growth—it’s a platform built for impact. Cam hopes to eventually open a creative studio that incubates talent and fosters collaboration among Black, queer, and marginalized artists. “I want to build a space where identity and excellence go hand in hand,” they say.


A Future Written in Design

Right now, Cam is taking on branding projects, refining their portfolio, and preparing to launch a small-run apparel line tied to the CXM brand. Every item will include visual storytelling and embedded design code—a consistent thread in Cam’s work.


They’re also exploring creative tech spaces, combining UI/UX design with wearable art, digital storytelling, and motion graphics.


Cam Green

Words to Create By

For other young designers, Cam offers this grounded advice: “Your early work will be chaotic. That’s okay. Keep going. Every project teaches you something.”


They also encourage creatives to build their own visual language, rather than chasing trends. “If your design speaks your truth, the right audience will find it.”


Legacy in Motion

Cam Green is a rising creative who refuses to be boxed in. Their work across disciplines isn’t just stylish—it’s meaningful. It reflects a life lived with intention and a career built on clarity, courage, and constant creation.


Through CXM: Creative x Mind, Cam is reminding us that great design is more than aesthetics—it’s storytelling. It’s identity. It’s power.


Connect with Cam Green

📍 Instagram: @cxm.creativexmind

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