Personality Quirks
history fan | narrative buff | fine art enthusiast
I designing and create objects for interactive works, for example escape rooms, interactive theatre and interactive museum displays. I work in a variety of media including bookbinding, modelling, and vintage item restoration. I also incorporate creative copywriting, and narrative design.
Nuances
I come from a background in visual communication, having studied illustration at both a bachelors and masters level as well as a substantial attention to detail.
Rate
Rate Weighting
£150-£200
Depends on project
Specialist areas
Core Services
Content Production
Artworking
Tools
Adobe Photoshop / MS Word / MS Powerpoint
Hashtag Highlights
#artworking #videogames #visual #illustration #interactive #interactivemedia #museums #escaperooms #theatre #bookbinding #modelling #restoration #illustrator #artist #mixedmedia #mixedmediaartist #narrative #narrativedesigner
Skill Armoury
Brand Portfolio
Testimonials
Martin Mason, Inclusion | Talent | Leadership
Paul Stein, Chief Technology Officer at Rolls-Royce plc
“Justine is a truly wonderful communications professional who can navigate the organisation quickly, build rapport at pace and craft excellent communications. Every piece of comms that I have seen Justine create is both inspiring and engaging. I would recommend Justine to anyone looking for first class communications and engagement support that make a difference.”
“I worked with Justine as my communications partner and can unreservedly recommend her. For written media she was able to turn high level accounts with deep technical content into readable, interesting copy. For videos she is a great coach helping with style as well as content. And she was proactive in recommending when senior thought needed to be communicated more widely to engage employees. A great comms partner. ”
Blog Articles
Emotionally Absent Parents in Jane Austen’s Novels
In Jane Austen’s Persuasion (1817), Sir Walter Elliot holds the startling view that ‘his two other children were of very inferior value.’1 However, Sir Walter is not alone in being a disinterested parent in Austen’s novels.
Readers revel in Mr and Mrs Bennet of Pride and Prejudice (1813). Mr Bennet has some of the best lines in the novel, but they also reveal his flaws as a parent. ‘Lydia will never be easy till she has exposed herself in some public place or other,’2 he says wittily, before allowing her on a disastrous trip to Brighton.
Contact Amy to find out more.
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