We love the smell of freshly roasted coffee beans and leapt at the chance to work with local roaster, Devon Roast. Established over 50 years ago, the Costa Rica Plantation Company is enjoying a flourishing trade with local coffee shops and hotels and, with a desire to raise their profile even more, they asked us to brand their latest offering, ‘Devon Roast’ and the promise of the ‘finest coffee, freshly roasted in Devon’.

Our designs take their inspiration from the rolling Devon hills and use a rustic, textured approach that reflects the company’s hand-roasting methods. We’ve provided a supporting brand toolkit with views of the Devon coastline as its theme, to keep their printed material and merchandise on-brand.

A wide range of branded work includes packaging, mugs, clothing, stationery, menus, flags, pavement signs, window stickers, flyers and a new website (click to enlarge images).

Devon Roast also now offer new barista training courses and throw their doors open every Friday in May and June from 11am-noon for a tour of their facility.

Take a look at some of our branding work:

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Creativity is an elusive thing. One theory is that some lucky people are simply wired with creative, inquisitive and lateral thinking minds. Biosocial theory for example suggests that creativity is genetic, and thus, geniuses are indeed born, not made. Furthermore it proposes that there is a link between ‘madness’ and creativity.

As a ‘creative’ agency, dna’s currency is essentially ‘creative effectiveness’ – growing businesses, marketing products, generating awareness and creating brands – all in an engaging, memorable, identifiable and hopefully original way.

So, short of employing designers with a history of ‘madness’ or zapping them with electric cattle prods (which I’ve been assured doesn’t work), how can you make others, yourself or an agency more ‘creative’?

The answer lies somewhere within a mix of environmental, cultural, psychological and social modifications – some more obvious than others – a framework to cultivate a creative spirit.

In this 4 part series, I’ll be departing my thoughts (along with some well trodden theories) on the steps needed to create an ideal breeding ground for creativity in yourself and within an agency environment:


INDIVIDUALS & TEAMS

Immerse yourself

What chance have you got of producing something fresh and truly creative if you’ve no idea what is happening in the industry? Not only will you uncover the no-go areas and over-exploited trends but it also acts as a constant reminder of the level of talent out there – raising your bar and challenging yourself and others around you.


Gather inspiration…

Have one eye open at all times to fresh design work and inspirational thinking. Collate things you like or the work of people you admire. Bury your head in books, films, paintings, photographs, conversations, blogs and portfolios, keeping reference either in a note book or a Pinterest page. Consider using online RSS feeds, Feedly, Zeit etc to bring relevant content to you. In this way you can follow trends, and then ignore them.


…but don’t steal (consciously!).

You will learn nothing – no more than you would have by simply viewing the work. Be driven by a desire to have created an exemplary ad, wishing you had come up with the idea. Imitation may be known as the sincerest form of flattery but it’s also the sign of a lacklustre creative – be sure the work is authentic to you. It’s widely considered that nothing is 100% original however – it’s human nature that we are inspired by the work around us, weaved in to our daily lives consciously and subconsciously.

Derren Brown famously wielded his powers of perception and mind manipulation to turn the tables on the advertising experts, subconsciously influencing them to design a preconceived campaign idea they thought to be original, but based on subtle queues they experience en route to the office. It’s a mesmerising watch.

So if you see similar work elsewhere, don’t despair, remember the words of Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you steal from – it’s where you take them to.”


The world is round

Years of corporate strategies have pounded hierarchies in to flat tiers.
Think of your studio as less of a pyramid and more of an amphitheatre – an open forum for discussion and ideas. Structure teams in a circular formation with a collaborative way of thinking.


Collaborate

Collaboration is fun. Being relaxed and engaged is ideal for idea generation. Work in pairs or groups and encourage others to do so yourself. Bouncing ideas around is always an essential part of a creative process – taking thinking off on new, unexpected tangents. Ensure the session is lead by a decision maker, an arbiter of the creative routes worth exploring – remember, a camel is a horse designed by committee.

Ideas are not to be coveted; they are to be shared, especially in an age of online collaboration – an overly individualistic culture can stifle creativity. Another maxim, ‘two heads are better than one’ has never been more true because great ideas can come from anywhere. Involve as many people as possible in the initial brainstorming session. Give everything away and you’ll get more coming back to you.

Collaboration is not exclusive to internal resources either, it extends far beyond the internal workings of an agency. Some of the best work out there was a product of integrated agency collaboration, each playing to their particular strengths. Networking within the creative design industry can lead to the forging of unexpected creative partnerships.

For more ideas to grow creativity, stay tuned for part 2. Why not subscribe to the dna blog for updates?

(Opinion: Jon Price – Creative Director)

After a team outing at a nearby climbing centre, some of ‘Team DNA’ know what it feels like to reach the top. You already know that we’re always striving for higher things. Well now we’ve got the aches and pains to prove it – literally!

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The wall-climbing venue, which has been built inside the turbine hall of a former Power Station, is used both by serious climbers and aspirational wannabees like us. Needless to say, we were at the ‘fun’ end of the building where we were able to try out a variety of climbing walls in relative safety.

After a briefing session we donned our ever-so-flattering safety harnesses and were led out into the cavernous hall where all kinds of floor to ceiling climbing apparatuses were waiting to tax our muscles. The fittest amongst us headed straight for the timed climb like a rat up a drainpipe while old wrinklies like me took on the more tame climbs nearby.

See more pics… Continue reading

In a bid to add more capability to our already excellent Client Services team, we have recruited Sarah Hunt to the position of Studio Manager.

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Sarah has 20 years’ experience of production management in marketing and design environments and has used this to great effect already at dna.

So, being a bit of a right and left brained thinker, she is happiest with a working day that includes a good measure of order and process, combined with a splash of creativity too.

When she’s not at work she also loves getting out and about and enjoying the Devon coast and countryside.

Sarah is a very able conduit between clients, suppliers and the studio so, if you have a project underway with us at the moment, you may be hearing from Sarah shortly!

There was a time when, if you wanted to be noticed as a writer, you had to pester a publisher to get your material into print. Except for those who were writing just for the fun of it, the purpose was to make money. Submit articles to magazines and hope to get paid for it; get your book published and hope it appears on the Best Sellers list.

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Now that we’re firmly in the internet era, anyone can get their material published and get it noticed. I’m talking here about Blogging and how it can make money for your business.

Blogs (a shortened form of Web Log) started out as a purely personal kind of online diary. “I went to a party the other day…” and so on. But it wasn’t long before the commercial benefits of publishing your own material were harnessed by businesses and we’ve embraced this too at DNA.

If you are in business you may be asking “do I really need a blog?” and I will answer with a resounding “Youbetcha!”

Just like having a decent website, Social Media (under which umbrella blogging fits) is another vital tool for successful 21st century businesses. Whether you are a freelance carpet fitter or a global chemicals company, well-crafted blogging can bring web traffic – and potential customers – to your virtual shop counter.

Continue reading