
Karen Mead
Karen works large. We shot a number of her prints for her website, and some of her linocuts are over 2 metres on their longest edge. The image above is mixed-media on sail cloth.

Karen works large. We shot a number of her prints for her website, and some of her linocuts are over 2 metres on their longest edge. The image above is mixed-media on sail cloth.

Rebecca Telford’s screenprints have always been a joy to us, so we were chuffed when Rebecca asked us to put a website together for her. Simplicity was the name of the game, as her fantastic work needs little ornamentation.

Victoria Chalmers is a painter, whose work we admire. So making this was a treat. We also photographed a number of her lovely drawings and paintings.

Hanne is a ceramacist working below us in Blaze. Her slipcast milk cartons are must-have items and we’re awfully pleased to be able to help her take over kitchens everywhere.

Tom Sowden is an artist, curator and Ed Ruscha enthusiast, which wins him points with us. The content of Tom’s work incorporates many time elements, and given his large output of videos we decided to built his site as one, continuous scrolling page, with sections that roughly (metaphorically) equate to frames in a reel. We are lucky enough to own a couple of Sowden originals, and it was a real honour to put together his site.

Lucy is an illustrator and printmaker who works from the mundane and every day. She came to us wanting a site that would compliment her style: so we built drawnbylucysmith.com.

Robert Manners is an artist, curator and sash-window-refurbisher by day. His work spans mediums and it was a real pleasure designing a site around such strong imagery.

Freya Cumming is an artist and illustrator whose quirky style has graced Bristol since she made the trip south of the border a few years ago. Very happy to have built this one!

Viv Limebear is an artist. Viv asked us to shoot a collection of very delicate etchings of spiderwebs she had made. Each web is printed onto plastic, then mounted onto cardboard. Beautiful.

Michele Powell produced these wonderful chairs during her degree. Each was bathed in acid to strip back to the pure wood, then reupholstered and reimagined with plaster, hair and other bits and bobs.