Showing posts with label Poster Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poster Design. Show all posts

2007-01-01

Big Brothers Big Sisters Campaign

This project involved a 4-poster series created through a pro-bono arrangement at my agency. The final posters (not the four you see below) were the result of collaboration, but all of the creative work in the series I have included here is my own. The client wished for the posters to communicate the idea that being a Big Brother brings as much joy to the "Big" as it does to the "Little."




2005-05-01

Habitat for Humanity Conference Material

This poster and booklet are two components of the conference material I designed for a student project. The poster draws attention to the impact that a single individual can have by choosing to spend their vacation volunteering with Habitat for Humanity.



The booklet juxtaposes visual ideas of vacationing and Habitat for Humanity's home building mission.



2004-09-01

Performing Arts Bookfair

Below is a promotional poster for a fair at which books about the performing arts were featured.

Discrimination Poster

This poster was created in response to the French National Assembly's decision to ban Muslim head scarves and other religious symbols from public schools in February of 2004. Designed for a class project about discrimination, this poster focuses on the ignorance of this archaic decision regarding the traditional practices of Islam, with 18th century Marie Antoinette representing the modern-day French government.

Religion and Politics Lecture Series

This series of three posters for a lecture series entitled "Religion and Politics in the USA" exemplifies my concept that the separation between religion and politics in our country is absent in many of our daily, overlooked practices.



2004-07-01

PLATO Poster

A leadership training program was developed during my internship at Thomson Course Technology. This team was called PLATO (Providing Leaders Accelerated Training Opportunities), and I was asked to redesign some materials that had previously been quickly thrown together. The previous materials relied heavily on illustrations of the actual Greek philosopher, Plato, and I wanted to give my redesign a very different feel while still acknowledging the origins of the program's name (by incorporating Greek columns). Below is my solution to this visual problem:


There is something about this poster that reminds me of the illustrative style in Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol.