Fly Posters for the London design festival completed in January whilst at Pentagram working with Dominic Lippa and Jeremy Kunze
The publication process. A series of 6 book/posters that explore Lucy and Rose's work both together and separately. This blog will show the process through design and construction of the publication. This visual evidence demonstrates the way we work together and illustrates the many stages each issue has gone through.
The project that follows is the documentation and collection as a result of delivering the first publication. It illustrates, through a series of booklets and posters our process, our input and eventually our output showing visually the relationship between work and reward.
contact:
lucyandrose@googlemail.com
See more of our work at:
www.rosebrissenden.com
www.lucygroom.co.uk
Fly Posters for the London design festival completed in January whilst at Pentagram working with Dominic Lippa and Jeremy Kunze
We are working with the largest collector of Blade Runner props and memorabilia to document and create a book on his collection. Along with a nice long interview with the man himself, Geoff Hutchins we are collecting submissions from writers, collectors and film critics to go in the book. Here’s a sneak peak of the photo shoot in Essex at Geoffs house. His collection in situ with a bit of dramatic lighting.

We finally made it onto someone’s website! (we’re trying to pretend they didn’t type rosie instead of rose)
We were kindly asked to take part in an exhibition by ‘birdwatching’ a group of designers and thinkers promoting female designers. The exhibition was called chick pods and this was the lovely promotional material they used, including the ‘chick’ badges we wore as exhibitors.




MAKING, MAKING, MAKING.
We’ve put together the display table now, cut down the wood, perspex etc. Nailed it, screwed it, sanded it and painted it. It will house all of the souvenirs we received along the way.
Letterpressing Hand and Eye’s front cover was one of the last things we had to do and it went happily to plan. Well except for the dodgy printers fist we had bought from Greenwich market. He said it was type high but when we saw Helen she soon noticed that not only was it not type high, it was also plastic. She kindly brought in her printer’s fist for us to use and saved the day.