Category Archives: Advertising

Surrey Hills CowParade

A recent project I had the chance to work on whilst freelancing for one of my regular clients, Storm Creative Partnership, was to come up with a visual design for a life-sized cow taking part in the Surrey Hills CowParade this summer.

CowParade is the largest and most successful public art event in the world, born in Switzerland in 1998. Since then has been staged in more than 80 cities and towns worldwide. Over the years 3,000 cows have been decorated by more than 5,000 artists and over $30million has been raised for charitable organisations at the auctions which take place at the end of each CowParade.

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Why cows? According to CowParade this is a popular question. “Simply, the cow is a universally beloved animal. The cow represents different things to different people around the world she’s sacred, she’s historical, she connects us to our past but the common feeling is one of affection.”

The fiberglass cow was delivered in an actual livestock trailer (much to our amusement) to the company in Handcross, West Sussex. Covered in bubblewrap it enjoyed it’s first few weeks grazing in the shed whilst I came up with some concepts on the design for the client, Gatwick Airport, the cow’s sponsors.

I came up with about half a dozen different concepts all revolving around travel and Gatwick’s flight destinations. My personal favourite was a pilot design which I was inspired by some prints my parents used to have on our toilet wall. It was a collection of different animals dressed up in Wrangler Jeans, I was visualising these as I was designing how the cow would look. I’m really pleased they went with this idea as the finished design looks really eye-catchhing!

The cow was named Amoolia Earhart (Amelia Earhart) after the first female aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean in 1928. She is now on display at Gatwick South Terminal for the next few months.

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You can read more about the Surrey Hills CowParade here.

Brighton Yoga Festival – “For the Love of Yoga”

Since moving to Brighton last year I have been working with local companies, one of which is the Brighton Yoga Festival. This year will see the one-day free festival, now in it’s third year, taking place at the iconic Brighton Dome venue in July. I have been offering my design services pro bono, so far creating the new logo (in collaboration with festival organiser Stiliana Delcheva) as well as designing posters, adverts and flyers for the festival. It’s great to be involved in a local not-for-profit as well as being able to practice some yoga!

http://www.brightonyogafestival.org

BYF Canvas Tote Bag MockUp

BYF poster_mockup

The Sly Ones

This cleverly art directed and impactful advertising campaign for The International Fund for Animal Welfare features three portraits of men who have been given fox-like makeovers dressed up in red hunting attire. Their demeanour is sinister and snooty, they appear to be looking down their noses at you through satisfied eyes. The design of the adverts allows for a strong message with the typography simple and classy allowing the portraits to be the focal point.
 
The controversial campaign, created pro bono by agency J. Walter Thompson called ‘The Sly Ones’, aims to highlight the 10 years since the ban on hunting with hounds. 80{c5abff81d31a789a3fa419706cf5dd0fd279276c597e6ef9fa8c73bb55a34e77} of the public support a ban on fox hunting, but many are unaware that fox hunting with dogs still continues due to money and power at the top.
 
A strong, emotive campaign with a clever strapline; “It’s not the foxes who are sly”, revealing it’s actually the hunters who are the sly ones, not the foxes.
 
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If you explain it with football they’ll get it.

These series of adverts for Libero Football Magazine by agency Lola Madrid have used the language of football to explain about love, life and even taking out the bins. This clever and funny way of using analogies of Brazilian full-backs , tactics and managerial cycles is a great way of getting a mans attention on situations that they try to avoid. If you explain it with football they’ll get it. A teaching metaphor you wouldn’t expect women to use. And a good way for the fairer sex to get men to actually listen and not switch off!