My first week as an intern they asked me to make a poster for kids frames and mentioned that the president of the company liked a lot of color. Now, I have a 30x40in poster hanging up in optical stores all over the US.
This was my frist attempt at a typographic poster in this style. I was really excited with how it came out. Unfortunetly, the client wasn't ready to go forward and we had to place these posters on the back burner for the time being.
This was an alternate poster for the same client above.
For the same client I needed to adapt the style to advertise for kids frames. This was supposed to end up looking like a chalk board until it was unncessesary for me to move forward with it.
I was hired primarily for photography and video production. This was a video we released to showcase the key features of a new line of titanium eyeware. All of the photography and graphics were done by me.
Doing creative photography for eyeware was always a little strange. I thought I'd run out of concepts pretty quick, however, theres always something else you can photography. My biggest shocker was how fabricated the frames looked once photographed. Its strange how the frames above were actually in my hands and not illustrated on a computer.
I've gotten to work with some big brands like Marc Ecko.
It is always important to show off the key features of a frame and not distort it too much. These images will ultimately be seen by the consumer anyway.
Junction City frames in three styles showing off three different bold colors.