INSIGHT

INSIGHT

06 Oct, 2021
Caister Lifeboat has been saving lives at sea since 1791. Completely independent, they depend entirely on public donations to help provide safety and rescue services to the countless vessels, crews and beach visitors to this area of the East Coast of England. We are proud to support this vital charity - developing a new website to provide details of their latest rescues - or "shouts" as they are known - and most importantly to encourage donations. Client: Caister Volunteer Lifeboat Service Design, build & management: Brand Skillings
30 Sep, 2021
The brief from L&Q Estates was for a high-end brochure, with exemplary production values, that told the story of the Wixams development - taking an industrial site that had seen better days and transforming it into an aspirational new village community. The resulting 32pp brochure features a wealth of newly commissioned photography by Julian Calverley, together with historical research, copywriting, design and creative direction from Brand Skillings. Commissioned by: Ian Hardwick, Managing Director Client: L&Q Estates Design & management: Brand Skillings Photography: Julian Calverley Art direction: Nick Brand Print: Colt Press
29 Sep, 2021
The brief from the University of Greenwich was to produce a 22m wall mural depicting teaching and multi-purpose disciplines in nursing and care.
By Charles Skillings 06 Jul, 2020
How e-newsletters can help get you restarted after lockdown, combining effective messaging, a highly targeted approach and real-time analytics.
28 May, 2020
Most people have heard of the term, but what does rebranding really mean - and when is the right time to make a start?
26 May, 2020
We prioritise transparency in our business approach - so we have included answers to some of the questions we are most often asked by new clients...
26 May, 2020
Nick Brand explains how recent technological changes have enabled a return to true typographic values...
26 May, 2020
You can’t help but notice that the overall look of many new websites is now more minimalistic. Nick Brand discusses this design trend...
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