Sunday, 28 March 2010

Rob Brearley

Other work by the designer of the RGB studio.
All the work i have found below are all design, process and concept driven briefs. They all use different techniques which work really well on all the printed material. This has been an eye opener for me that there is more to design than just ink!

Identity and Promotional material for DigitalMill
DigitalMill, a web production company which promises to deliver a direct digital production service, cutting out the middle man. The combing lines are an integral part of the identity, illustrating the fluidity, speed and accuracy of their internal workflow. The patterns change in complexity and scale, running through all printed material and accross the interior design of their new premises.


The SubCulture Identity and Promotion
The SubCulture is a club and live performance space for diverse underground musical tastes. This simple typographic route uses a triangle as a positioning device, creating several cost effective fly posting opportunities.


Urban Picnic Identity and Promotion
Ant and blanket pattern graphics are used to interperet the common picnic in this event brochure for Architecture Week. Using architecture stencils as the basis for the typography, the brochure has contrasting colours which reflect building


Creamfields Bible
With leather debossed covers and three seperate fluro sections, the 'bible' documents the success of Creamfields events worldwide, The book is held together with a single lanyard.


The Advanced Digital Institute is an independent research and development institute based in West Yorkshire focused on becoming an international centre of excellence. The optical nature of the ADI logo reflects their work, in contrast the spacious photography brings a human element to the brand. The dot matrix grid is carried through the stationery range and printed materials, underpinning everything they do.



KSwiss-Moulton Campaign
Highscore with Moulton, takes a nostalgic look at tennis herriage and retro game aesthetics. Based on iconic computer game graphics, Moulton challenges it's core audience to a game of Pong, resurrecting a cult game and building a cult brand.

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