We’re smart and good-looking.

Rahul Gonsalves In 2005, Rahul Gonsalves founded Pixelogue, which grew into it's current form: a bespoke design studio that builds elegant, accessible and standards-compliant websites which make a big impact.

He has been involved in promoting web and accessibility standards for the last five years and in addition to speaking on accessibility, conducts regular workshops on building accessible websites around India.

He has also been involved in the drafting of the National Policy on Electronic Accessibility for the Ministry of Information and Communications Technology as a member of the Core Group on Information Technology and Communications at the National Centre for the Promotion of Employment of Disabled Persons (NCPEDP).

Nafisa Crishna Nafisa Crishna forms Pixelogue's illustration department. She graduated from the Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology in 2008 where she specialised in Textile Design.

Over the last two years she has worked as the in-house graphic designer for VAANI – Deaf Children’s Foundation, a Kolkata-based non-profit. In her free time, Nafisa experiments with different visual styles over on her blog, Drawing Words.

Ria Rajan Ria Rajan is our newest pixel. She graduated from the Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology in 2008. She has since worked at an art investment firm and freelanced as an illustrator and print designer.

Ria writes for Designwala, a design innovation and social intervention blog and is also the Resident Designer at Jaaga - Creative Common Ground, a Bangalore-based NGO that seeks to nurture innovative endeavors in the spheres of Art and Technology.

We work well with:

Miranj Design Miranj Design is a web design studio in New Delhi run by Prateek Rungta and Souvik Das Gupta. They're our go-to guys for complex code wrangling.

Nandini Ramachandran Nandini Ramachandran graduated from National Law School of India University. In between stunting her eyesight and emotional growth through chain-reading, she vets all our content and ensures that it reads as well as it looks.