Print Design
Businesses and products, let’s face it – your business and your products have to exist in the real world. Touch; Look; Feel; Texture; Quality. There’s nothing quite like holding something in your hands, or seeing it in print.
James Vincent McMorrow
James Vincent McMorrow is an award-winning Irish musician. His music has featured in a number of popular TV series and films. I’ve worked with him in the design of all his releases. The album (pictured bottom left) was released to critical acclaim in Ireland through Universal Music. It will shortly be released in the US through Vagrant Records.
John has consistently provided quality designs in a professional and reliable manner.
David Harris, Universal Music Ireland
The Master’s Apprentice
A leading Irish independent television company, Tyrone Productions, approached me to create a DVD for the distribution of a television series made with the national tourism board, Fáilte Ireland. I created both the print and interface elements.
Liberate Eden
This project was developed over a number of months with a friend who is a writer.
There was a high-level of collaborative on all the visual elements in the book, creating an interesting interplay between the written and visual elements.
Crucial DVD Series
3Rock Youth, the Church of Ireland youth initiative for the Dublin region, approached me to work with them to create a series of interactive DVDs with accompanying guide books which could be used in the confirmation curriculum.
I designed the branding and packaging as well as interactive elements. Over the course of two years, 5 discs in total were published.
Essential – “Being Human”
The Church of Ireland devised an annual alternative service to appeal to a younger student audience featuring live music, videos, performance art and more. “Liberate Eden” was 2007’s theme.
The artwork reflected the idea of standing out from the crowd and letting one’s natural creativity come forth.
Essential – “Horror Vacui”
Artwork for another Church of Ireland alternative service for students. “Horror vacui” is a term used in art-history and archaeology which refers to the filling of the entire surface of an artwork with detail. The theme for 2006 was on finding silence and peace in the midst of the busyness of modern life.