Here pieces of my decades-spanning passion project, Of Evernost, will appear in the form of...illuminated hypertext literature? Living poems? Point-and-click ungames? What William Blake would make if he'd learned JavaScript instead of engraving?
There's a lot here, and it's only going to keep growing. Where to start depends on what interests you.
If you're interested in....
Most of my art is analog in various media, photographed with an iPhone, and edited in Photoshop (also a few bits of things drawn in Photoshop).
Traditionally, I use HTML, CSS, vanilla JavaScript, and nothing else. For Jennie's Room and "jennie's rainbow sketch diary" I ventured into Typescript (yay! helpful!) and parcel.js (probably more trouble than it's worth at this stage of this project). I may keep experimenting (trying to learn architecture and stuff).
My work will basically always look better on a computer than on a mobile device; responsive design is great but not something I've chosen to invest much time in. In general, I appreciate feedback enormously (even if I can't address bugs or issues right away), but be gentle if you can - I'm only one person, and I have a day job, and I have a ton of material I want to share.
As above, I'm lucky enough to have a great day job, and despite (or because of!) the fact that Of Evernost is so much more than a hobby or a side hustle, I have complex reservations about selling it, ranging from the idealistic ("It's a gift and an alternate reality, not a product") to the pragmatic ("Will anyone see it if it's not free?") That said, I know such a policy makes it harder for folks who are trying to make a living with their art; if you run across something here that you would pay for if you could, please consider (within the constraints of your budget) buying something of comparable size from another independent artist.
So, this July I self-published Out of Tales, Or, January: A Book of Evernost as a paperback on Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing. I hope that, by the end of the year, I will have put all its content into Jennie's Room or other work on this site.
Next year may bring This Thing, Or, February into being.