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My pal's pal. Since I wasn't acquainted with this little guy, I wanted to make sure that I got at least one capture of him eating. Yes, that was the big agenda. What else could it be? I took this shot, even though it was a bit far away. This was taken right before dusk. I love shooting at that time of day! © Maria Dorothea Campbell 2014
Senior Art Director - Hitachi rebranding - creation of new identity standards to re-brand Hitachi's convoluted branding architecture.
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Agency: CORPORATE BRANDING
Client: HITACHI
Creative Dir: MITCH GROSSMAN
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CREATIVE DIRECTOR | ART DIRECTION | GRAPHIC DESIGN | BRANDING | COLLATERAL
FOLIO : www.behance.net/mitch_g
EMAIL : mitch@gstarstudio.com
Weedy leafy panel sketch
Inspired by it’s beauty and diversity, this exhibit followed the path of a family that was exploring Australia for the first time. A journal that recorded their findings would serve as wayfinding signage, leading the visitor through various interactive exhibits and tanks.
This exhibit would have featured fish, plants, and animals, all native to Australia.
2010 is the 20th Anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act and AIGA Colorado is celebrating it with this year's Giving Voice Poster Project. It is a collaboration between AIGA Colorado, VSA Arts of Colorado/Access Gallery and the partnership with Colorado Cross Disability Coalition.
"Advocate For Equality", a propaganda-style poster that's meant to live on the city streets, in full view of the public eye. Street-wise bullhorns rise above the gathering crowd, informing us that EQUALITY is a universal right.
Two interactive components show the impact and importance of everyday water conservation. A series of before and after photos that follow the course of the Colorado River are synchronized to light up in unison with fiber optics, showing the depleation of water.
A large scale exhibit that highlights before and after effects that dams and aqueducts have on the Colorado River.
PROJECT: Pangaea Designs wanted to highlight the diversity of their company by creating a unique shaped piece that spoke to all of the studio’s talents.
DESCRIPTION: Pangaea Designs, a company that specializes in custom fabricated models, fossils, and exhibitry components for natural history museums, parks, visitor centers, zoos, and aquaria.
Logo Development, Brand Identity, Brand Collateral Brochure, Web Design, Construction Site Graphics.
Hands-on creative director and creative team lead of 30 for Compaq.com - Complete rebranding and re-architecture of the Compaq web presence. Usability and interface design -
Increase in online commerce from $800k to $4 million - All designs transitioned to printed material to become a unique paradigm from web to print
- Creation and design
implementation of all Flash minisites which consisted of new product launches and instructional videos - creation of all web and printed guidelines for global rollout –
What Lurks Beneath exhibit puts visitors under the dock and just below the water’s surface to observe how human action affects various aspects of sea life.
This exhibit features five habitats, which contain discarded items such as cans, bottles, fishing poles, lobster traps, car tires, and even a toilet.
Sketchbook illustrations
Characters, creatures and letterforms fill volumes of sketchbooks in the Beindorff Design studio. Sketches are a central part of the working method as preliminary concepts evolve into final artwork.
Details of personal work.
Christ Church Outdoor Signage
The goal was to create a dynamic sign that retained the historical look and integrity of the building. Brushed steel mixed with the structures old blonde and red brick, bring about a unique and progressive result.
Christ Church is located in Denver, Colorado, at 7th & Colorado and was established in 1927.
Weedy leafy panel sketch
Inspired by it’s beauty and diversity, this exhibit followed the path of a family that was exploring Australia for the first time. A journal that recorded their findings would serve as wayfinding signage, leading the visitor through various interactive exhibits and tanks.
This exhibit would have featured fish, plants, and animals, all native to Australia.
Kyle ‘Spheyiah’ Swimmer performs a traditional dance at Ideum's Open House. Swimmer's performance was a unique complement to Ideum's experimental Exploring Pueblo Pottery project, which uses projection mapping to bring Native American motifs to vivid life. Learn more about Ideum's creative approach at ideum.com/work.
Weedy leafy panel sketch
Inspired by it’s beauty and diversity, this exhibit followed the path of a family that was exploring Australia for the first time. A journal that recorded their findings would serve as wayfinding signage, leading the visitor through various interactive exhibits and tanks.
This exhibit would have featured fish, plants, and animals, all native to Australia.
Concept renderings for the Mercedes-Benz display areas at the Boca Raton Concours d'Elegance. ©Bombshell Productions
behind the scenes with andrew shelby filming a new healthy girls fitness commercial with michelle armstrong7
Public Relations, Digital and Interactive, Content Marketing, Creative Services, Social Media
At Bluetext we began to notice this last year when looking at the analytics of the websites, microsites, and landing pages we’ve designed and launched for some of our technology clients, all targeted at government employees. These include GovDefenders.com for DLT Solutions, Oracle, Symantec, and Quest Software; TheCloudPlaybook.com and DataCenterChampions.com for NetApp resellers; and GovTransformers.com for Google. More and more visitors to those sites—more than half of the traffic by the end of the year—were arriving by way of the mobile versions of Android and Safari.
While the move to mobile has been a topic of conversation for several years, our data suggested that it was happening more quickly and more pervasively in the government than previously believed. We decided to survey federal employees that work in information technology (IT) and ask them directly. With the help of the opinion research firm Fabrizio Ward we surveyed 200 federal IT workers shortly before Christmas. The conclusions confirmed our data.
The survey found that 45% of IT staff are using mobile devices, including tablets and smartphones, for work on a daily basis, and another 7% are doing so at least once a week. In other words, more than half of IT workers are now regularly—if not daily—relying on mobile devices to do their job. We then asked about their non-IT colleagues, and here’s where the adoption starts to get pervasive across agencies. Thirty-eight percent reported that many of their colleagues are using mobile devices, while another 19% reported that most of the employees across their agencies are doing so. Only 3% said that none of their colleagues are using mobile. This means that not only are the majority of federal IT staff using mobile devices for work, but that the majority of non-IT staff have also migrated to mobile.
That’s more than a trend.
Indeed, those who are using their mobile devices for work are doing so frequently. The survey found that of those who have gone mobile, 66% are doing so daily, and another 22% are doing so at least once a week. While email was by the far the more common application for mobile access, more than a third were using project management tools, and another 20% were using social media for work. (Facebook was the most-used social media platform on mobile devices, followed by Twitter, Google+, and LinkedIn.)
This is important news for government agencies which need to act more like the commercial organizations if they want to efficiently meet their mission demands and attract the highest caliber employees. But it’s also a challenge to companies who want to communicate with and engage government employees—if you want to be heard, make sure your digital strategies are mobile-friendly and optimized for all devices.
www.bluetext.com/projects/bluetext-labs-mobility-infographic
What Lurks Beneath exhibit puts visitors under the dock and just below the water’s surface to observe how human action affects various aspects of sea life.
This exhibit features five habitats, which contain discarded items such as cans, bottles, fishing poles, lobster traps, car tires, and even a toilet.
Logo Development, Brand Identity, Brand Collateral Brochure, Web Design, Construction Site Graphics.
PROJECT: Denver University’s Center for Teaching International Relations identity represents one of the leading departments in the country, focusing and emphasizing the impact of policy on human welfare.
DESCRIPTION: Part of the Josef Korbel School of International Studies, Denver University’s Center for Teaching International Relations prepares our nation’s youth for increasingly global economic, environmental and political realities.
Whiteboarding sessions are critical to our design process. They help our team to identify our customer's needs and respond to specific challenges and objectives. See our portfolio: ideum.com/portfolio
Sketchbook illustrations
Characters, creatures and letterforms fill volumes of sketchbooks in the Beindorff Design studio. Sketches are a central part of the working method as preliminary concepts evolve into final artwork.
Details of personal work.
Traveling twin-size bed created for South Florida Theatre League's Get in Bed with the Arts campaign. Bombshell Productions. Ft. Lauderdale, FL. ©Bombshell Productions
This logo captures the kinetic energy in today’s modern wheelchair sports.
CWS is a year-round program that offers the chance for athletes to engage in a full spectrum of confidence building sports.
What Lurks Beneath exhibit puts visitors under the dock and just below the water’s surface to observe how human action affects various aspects of sea life.
This exhibit features five habitats, which contain discarded items such as cans, bottles, fishing poles, lobster traps, car tires, and even a toilet.
USA Jr. Olympic Hockey Festival
PROJECT:
The idea behind this logo was to highlight a star as the symbolic representation of the spirit of the games.
DESCRIPTION:
This mark promoted the 2000 Winter USA Jr. Olympic Hockey Festival.
Christ Church Outdoor Signage
The goal was to create a dynamic sign that retained the historical look and integrity of the building. Brushed steel mixed with the structures old blonde and red brick, bring about a unique and progressive result.
Christ Church is located in Denver, Colorado, at 7th & Colorado and was established in 1927.
Ideum is expanding our ability to develop immersive exhibit soundscapes with our new Immersive Dimensional Sound Lab.
What Lurks Beneath exhibit puts visitors under the dock and just below the water’s surface to observe how human action affects various aspects of sea life.
This exhibit features five habitats, which contain discarded items such as cans, bottles, fishing poles, lobster traps, car tires, and even a toilet.
On this day, I had such an abundant choice in front of me, and so many different ways to approach each subject. I found myself developing a photo study of macro angles. It was fun, interesting, and educational. When I started studying this particular photo and a few others before it, I realized the depth of my "macro" study. © Maria Dorothea Campbell 2014
What Lurks Beneath exhibit puts visitors under the dock and just below the water’s surface to observe how human action affects various aspects of sea life.
This exhibit features five habitats, which contain discarded items such as cans, bottles, fishing poles, lobster traps, car tires, and even a toilet.
What Lurks Beneath exhibit puts visitors under the dock and just below the water’s surface to observe how human action affects various aspects of sea life.
This exhibit features five habitats, which contain discarded items such as cans, bottles, fishing poles, lobster traps, car tires, and even a toilet.
behind the scenes with andrew shelby filming a new healthy girls fitness commercial with michelle armstrong5
Calm before a large downpour in New York City 8.28.05. The hint of water through the fence is the East River. Don't quite remember what the nearby cross streets were here. I also felt that black and white just wouldn't do this shot justice. Somehow it would have flattened the image. Keeping the color maintained its depth. I just love the way the fence is so sharp, and the background so impressionistic. © Maria Dorothea Campbell 2005