Morse Brown Design
Graphic Designer in Birmingham, West Midlands
Morse-Brown Design provides you the benefit of over a decade of knowledge of communicating customers messages, plus a proven track record in helping organisations reduce their environmental footprint through the use of recycled paper stocks and environmentally sensitive printing techniques. We work at all times to maintain superb customer relationships, and the most of our work comes via recommendation from delighted clients.
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Morse Brown Design
read moreWe love working with Student Christian Movement - we like what they do and their ethos. One of our recent jobs was to completely redesign their flagship magazine into a bigger coffee-table style publication. We helped Saltley Trust turn their research into colourful and engaging documents that would be read and kept by their conference participants. It's a classic case of how designers can add real value to whatever you do. Communicating complex information well - this is the role of good graphic design, and this is what we set out to do for Blackburn Diocese.
About Us
read moreCommunicating complex information well - this is the role of good graphic design, and this is what we set out to do for Blackburn Diocese. Turning information into art - art to be read, absorbed and acted upon. Art to inspire, lead and guide. We were delighted to start work with Valley House, a multi-agency charity that had outgrown its old brand and website. Face to face meetings, in-depth research and a lot of design work has produced a contemporary new brand and responsive website for the organisation.
Graphic design agency Birmingham
read moreWe were very pleased when we - a graphic design agency Birmingham - won this work for Oxford University. They've been great to work for, and a great client to have. Just when you thought the printed brochure was going the way of the dodo, it makes a come-back. Like all printed material, there's something special about being able to hold a designed, printed brochure in your hand and turn actual pages, instead of all this ubiquitous digital stuff. Not that we're against digital of course - there's a time and place for it all.