I was set a brief by Suck and Chew sweet shop to promote their Kola Kube sweets. The video was put on youtube and promoted by 2 other sweets shops and gained over 2000 views.
I responded to a brief to promote London City Farms. I chose to celebrate the fact that they were out of place in the city with a series of short clips suitable for the internet followed up by an interactive ambient element to the campaign.
City Farms continued
City Farms continued
At the same time the videos would be released online for the City Farm brief I want donkeys to appear around London, as stickers on walls and bus stops. By scanning the QR code on the donkey you are taken to a website that uses GPS to plot the location of the donkey you have found. It also shows you the location of the farms and you can click on them to find out more information. As you find more donkeys their locations are collected on the website map and once you have enough you become eligible for prizes and discounts at the farm.
I completed a brief that asked us to use signage in an unusual way to encourage people to go to a place. I chose The Garden Museum on Albert Embankment and planted vegetables in pavements cracks overnight.
The response was great, with the museum getting a large party booking off the back of it and having many people Tweet to them about the vegetables arrival. See the response in these links:
http://www.facebook.com/media/set/set=a.10150667617874691.411256.139808374690&type=1
I created the website www.flickrflash.me in response to a brief to create a page that made a connection between Flickr and Youtube. By putting in a url of any flickr page the website plays these images in sequence, at the same rate as an animation creating a link between photography and moving image.
I completed a Design and Interaction brief to visualise the sound of music. I chose to depict Gnarles Barley ‘Going on’ and use the hight and density of the equaliser to determine the form of the landscape, with every bar represented by a map square.
A design for Bradley King, a surf photographer to use both as a logo and adapted as watermark.
