Monsters of the Deep


Working in collaboration with The National Maritime Museum and A Side Graphics studios I created a series of short promotional videos to market the upcoming show for the National Maritime Museum as well as the imagery for a number of high resolution banners which can now be seen around Cornwall, ranging from everything from buses and sides of the buildings to toilets. The original brief involved some very cool conceptual imagery provided by the talented A-Side that was to feature around the idea of phosphorescence and some kind of Kraken from the deep. The project evolved quite drastically and this ended up being a multitude of videos, projections, banners and promotional content which can be seen below.

Great project & show. The Times described it as “A show packed with Marvels”. I would definitely recommend checking it out in Falmouth.

National Martime Museum Falmouth Cornwall Banner Advert.jpg

THE BANNERS

Video Projection

After a highly successful marketing campaign for the National Maritime Museum I was asked to create a giant projection to be the centre piece of the tour walk in to captivate the audience. It stood strong for over 4 years helping bring record intakes.

You can find more info here.

 
 

SOFTWARE USED

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CINEMA 4D - OCTANE - Z BRUSH - X PARTICLES - PREMIERE - AUDITION - AFTER EFFECTS - PHOTOSHOP

 

short trailer

The trailer was created from a series of shorts that were to be used on social media to build suspense in anticipation of the upcoming release. The theme of something unknown in the darkness being slowly revealed maintained the theme with a sense of magic from the phosphoresence. It featured on ITV, CBeebies as well as local cinemas.

 
 

“A show packed with marvels.”

The Times

the creative process

Sometimes it’s nice to see where it all began, below you can start to form an idea. We’ve got the initial concept below provided by the very talented guys at A-Side. With textures for the project created using a combination of images from photoshop and 3d paintovers & finally rigging done in Cinema 4D. If you’d like to read all about it over at the National Maritime Museums website just click that button.

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