James Townsend, designer, Bartle Bogle Hegarty
02 May 2013
WHAT HE DID Townsend designed Bartle Bogle Hegarty's recent print ad for The Guardian's coverage of the legacy of Baroness Thatcher.
Click
to remove filters
WHAT THEY DID Norbury and Bellis-Jones came up with the idea to launch a business selling cardboard boxes to home-movers on behalf of the youth homeless charity Depaul. Profits from the boxes, which feature tales of youth homelessness, go to the charity. Tell us about this project. We knew traditional...
WHAT HE DID Townsend designed Bartle Bogle Hegarty's recent print ad for The Guardian's coverage of the legacy of Baroness Thatcher.
Neville Brody, the president of D&AD and world-renowned graphic designer, reveals his favourite work from this year's nominations. The winners will be unveiled at the D&AD Awards on 12 June.
M&C Saatchi has worked with homeless Big Issue magazine vendors to create a national print and outdoor campaign that launched this week.
Roy Thomson was famous for knowing instinctively where there was good advertising money to be made. But when the Canadian launched the Sunday Times magazine on 4 February 1962, adland was far from convinced he was on to a winner. Advertisers and their agencies initially gave it a wide berth, not...
You voted in 2011 for the best ads to have ever appeared on UK streets at outdoorhalloffame.co.uk. Here are the 14 campaigns you determined should be next to join that prestigious roll-call.
It was small, squat and so ugly that you would be forgiven for wondering why anybody apart from the German engineers who gave birth to it could have loved it. Yet it s no exaggeration to say that the Volkswagen Beetle was the spark plug that made advertisers and their agencies the world over rethink...
Ikea, BT and Tesco are among the brands hoping to get lucky this Valentine's Day in our round-up of love-themed ads and brand activity.
When Mother created a wise and witty character called Frank who gave drug advice to young people, the team had no idea he would become so popular. Frank is now celebrating his tenth birthday. By Sophie Spence.
Alfredo Marcantonio pays tribute to one of the greatest copywriters of all time, Bob Levenson, who died last month.