Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2020

Having had quite a bit of positive feedback for the design in 2019, where I chose to go down the heavily filtered sunset in the sea photography route, this time I wanted a more hand-drawn illustrated style to the aesthetic, that would pay tribute to the airy summery retro vibes of seventies California surfing culture, and the many supremely cool surf posters that emerged from those times. Sadly, along with pretty much every other event worldwide in 2020, due to our lovely friend Rona, Armada had to be postponed. Luckily the festival was able to take place the following year.

Below is the base layer of the poster, designed so that various forms of text can be added over the top for the different uses. I layered photographs with illustration, sun burst photography, and real texture to give a bit of meatiness to the design, using real images of the sea for the sea, sky for the sky and sand for the sand. When it came to the smaller details I wanted to add texture of manmade materials, so the tents and vans were cut out of various different rusty metals. And I wanted to give a bit of dynamism to show the movement of the kites that were flying fiercely and proudly in the air, so I added gentle white sketch lines around each of them. All with a muted palette, but blended with vibrant summer colours this poster gives me such happy summer vibes which is what you want when thinking about a beach festival.

KITESURFING ARMADA 2020

The final poster ended up being a bit more refined with more kites around the logo, and the white sketch lines around the kites and vans on the bottom left removed, which was not my choice, but I’m still happy with how the final poster came out.

Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019

Lewis Crathern Kitesurfer. Kitesurfing Armada 2019

Once again I had the pleasure of working with the brilliant team at Armada Events to bring an epic two night and three day kitesurfing and music festival to Hayling Island. Working closely with Dan Charlish, Director of Armada Events, my job was overseer of the look of the festival, the environmental design within the site, and all of the printed and online design that goes with a project of this scale.

The design I went for this year was all about that glorious warm sunset glow you get from being on a beach and in the water in the later part of the day. I shot the original photography for the poster myself and I gave it several different treatments and layers, all about sunshine, light leaks and sun spots to give it that extra level of richness and depth. Along with the poster, which came first, and then was used to inform the design for the whole event, came the brochure, which although was quite a simple A5 affair, there were tricky elements to it such as the kitesurfing schedule page and the intricate centrefold site and beach map page which holds all of the logos of the the sponsors and brands that take part in the event. Also, I designed the town posters and billboards, the beach flags, stage banners and the welcome banners, which are the first things you’ll see when driving up to the festival. Online, there was a social campaign leading up to the event too.

This year, 8,000 kitesurfers from all over the world attended the event, as well as local festival goers and general public, as the organisers saw it grow bigger than ever before. As always it was a hugely successful and enjoyable weekend, so much so that Armada Events were able to secure investment and support to take the festival even further for future years to come.

Kitesurfing Armada 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019
Kitesurfing Armada Festival 2019

Photo Shoot with the Cafe Plenty guys

Cafe Plenty Brighton Photo Shoot

Here are a few of the photos I shot of the Cafe Plenty guys on Brighton beach a few months back (I know, I need to upload posts on my work more quickly, but this is really how busy I have been!).

So this was a tiny part in the rather monumental and extremely rewarding branding project I managed for them (here’s an in-depth piece on the work I did for them – Branding Cafe Plenty Brighton). And, as usual it was near impossible to prise these two away from their pre-opening work, so I had to hijack them after a meeting we had in Verano Lounge under the guise of a sunshine break. I had been trying to schedule a shoot for promotional purposes for some time so it wasn’t a complete surprise, but like with anything, when you have an insane workload squeezing anything else in just isn’t on the agenda.

The reason we didn’t shoot in the actual cafe is because it was still in the process of being built. So the beach was the perfect location to communicate the personalities of the guys, the city of the flagship cafe (as Plenty was to eventually be a national cafe group) and to show just how amazing it is to be in Brighton on a sunny day… The friendship chemistry is so lovely between these two so I’m glad I managed to capture that well here. The photo directly below of the guys in Verano Lounge was a totally un-staged moment. It was shot on my iPhone which is why the quality isn’t that great, but I wanted to include it anyway.

It was such a pleasure to work with these two, with never a dull moment, and as always it was truly a satisfying experience to be part of bringing a person’s visions and dreams to life – a huge reason why I do what I do…

Cafe Plenty Brighton, 3-4 Circus Parade, Preston Circus, Brighton.
www.instagram.com/cafeplentybrighton
www.facebook.com/cafeplentybrighton
twitter.com/PlentyBrighton

Cafe Plenty Brighton Photo ShootCafe Plenty Brighton Cafe Plenty Brighton Photo Shoot Cafe Plenty Brighton Photo Shoot Cafe Plenty Brighton Photo Shoot
Cafe Plenty Brighton Photo Shoot

 

I Love Analogue: A Photo of Glorious Brighton Beach…

I’m obsessed with taking pictures and I’ve been obsessed with the beach ever since I was little. We’d go there on hot days after school just to kick back and enjoy the summertime outside. Some things never change I guess, and before I even started Pretty Litter Magazine (an arts, fashion and lifestyle coffee table magazine I produced where I was Editor and Designer, in which I dedicated a whole section each issue, entirely to people’s love of analogue photography, called ‘I Love Analogue’), I took my Fisheye camera (from Lomography) out and experimented like crazy. And this is one of the shots that came back. In fact I actually had several film cameras on the go at one time so I could mix it up a little bit. It was always such a wondrous surprise when the photos came back from the lab. I’ve written countless articles about the joys of analogue. I might publish them online one day as at the moment they’re all locked up in the printed issues of PL, but for now, here’s a nice picture for you to bask in…

BRIGHTON BEACH FISHEYE

LUI HUI

An ‘I Love Analogue’ spread in Pretty Litter Magazine

A Brighton Sunset

Being incredibly fortunate to live about thirty seconds away from the sea, right on the border of Brighton and Hove, whenever I get a spare hour I’ll make an effort to go for a nice long walk along the seafront. In fact, it’s not really an effort as it’s always so wonderful whatever the season or weather. But working from my home studio sometimes I do need reminding that there’s a world out there away from the computer. And when I do, this is very typical of what awaits me. Nature is so incredibly beautiful and so very powerful, and sometimes when something is on your mind or if you’re perhaps not feeling 100%, a simple walk in the fresh air can do wonders for the senses and make us feel alive again…

BRIGHTON SUNSET