Cover and internals. Shortly after designing this I was divorced.
Not really.

Cover and internals. Shortly after designing this I was divorced.
Not really.

Only remaining images I have of an exhibition I was involved with in 2004/2005.
The subject was ‘animals in the public service’ and contained everything from medal winning dogs to carrier pigeons. It also contained animals that were put into public service that didn’t quite work as planned, such as the Cane Toad.
Woof.



Archviz is something I’ve dabbled with for a while but want to get into a bit more seriously.
This is my first interior scene using vray for Cinema 4d.
The room is a simple booled cuboid shape with 8 booled windows and skylights. The light source is a single sun. None of that awful setting up twenty lights to mimic daylight nonsense with this renderer.
Thanks to whoever made the couch. It’s in as a placeholder to test lighting for the moment.

I’m going to post a number of rejected covers for an biography of TW Edgeworth David that was published by the National Library of Australia a while ago.

A guide to help people on bikes get around the city of Prospect.
Eight panels front and back, folded down to dl.
No coffee shops marked on the map unfortunately.

The Rush book. Designed for the Department of Environment and Heritage.
The book featured the work of various gold and silversmiths ranging from beautiful fine filigreed pieces from the arts and crafts movement to gaudy ‘look how much gold I own’ commissions.
The pieces were to take centre stage on the internal pages, and were fragmented across the cover to show diversity, and also to break up any false hierarchy that might be created by using one or two pieces.

A 250 page 250mm x 220mm book for the National Library of Australia.
The subject was the paradise parrot, a beautiful bird that was wiped out by man around 80 years ago.
The ant hills it exclusively made it’s nests in were decimated, the birds themselves were shot so they could be stuffed and pesticide found its way into drinking water in their distribution area.
Within decades of it’s discovery the species was gone.
Humans eh?
