An 8.5" x 11", 4/4 color piece designed as a general marketing piece for a trade show.
No specific new product announcements this time, just reinforcing general product and company information.
The reverse side of the previous piece.
Printed on medium weight cover stock, this piece was designed to precisely fit within the pages of a trade show booklet distributed to all show attendees.
It was die cut (the red outline) so only the tab area would extend beyond the pages of the booklet.
It worked quite well and proved to be a good inquiry generator for us.
The flip side of the previous example.
This piece was created for a half-page magazine advertisement.
It was also produced as a short-run print piece for use as a marketing leave-behind.
A marketing piece for distribution at the InteliSea trade-show booth.
This is the front side, which is 8.5" x 11" trimmed, on medium weight cover stock with a matte finish.
This is the reverse side of the previous example.
A large format 7 foot tall pop-up trade show banner. The "InteliSea look" has been well
established at this point and one can see it carried through all marketing materials.
Another large format trade show banner. The yacht dash, LCD monitors, iPhone and iPad
were all modeled in 3D. Actual product screen captures were mapped onto the device models.
This is a tabloid format (11" x 17") engineering document. Although it was created for the engineering/technical teams
of InteliSea's customers, there is no reason a detailed technical document has to be unattractive It's a complete and accurate
physical layout of the entire system, yet it has the finished, professional look InteliSea was known for.
Designed for print as well as an html email blast. A clean, elegant and
very organic look for a multi-national neutraceuticals company.
This tri-fold product marketing piece was approximately 8.5" x 11" folded.
This example, distributed at our trade show booth, shows the cover and inside first reveal.
This example shows the inside of the same trifold piece shown previously.
The president of our company wrote a chapter for a yachting industry book and requested something "fun" for a section he thought might
be a little technical for the average reader. It needed to reinforce the story of complicated engineering/hardware that is easy to quickly
and intuitively understand through the power of the User Interface. This piece was based on a beautifully detailed picture of radio
equipment from the late 20's. The tongue-in-cheek text was mine and was really really meant as a place-holder, but he liked it, so we kept it in.
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