
This was a great little project that came our way. Myself and Ian were tasked with producing a fun and interactive challenge for Rate my Placement. The end product was a game called “Rate my Throw” in which the player is confronted with a member from the team and a barrage of snowballs. The player must use their skill to dodge and throw snowballs until they meet the next challenger, hopefully gaining a good enough score to get to the top of the scoreboard. The game was designed, illustrated and built using Flash and some very slick As3 from my esteemed colleague.
Play the Game
Posted By: Craig on January 20, 2009

I have been involved in this exciting new project for a children’s clothing brand “Skysprout”, mainly creating xhtml and css for the theming. I am working alongside one other Developer and an Art Director to produce an eCommerce experience which we hope will grow Skysprout’s online presence. For this project we decided to use Magento (an open source eCommerce solution) to power the store and integrate Wordpress to handle the front-end.
Posted By: Craig on October 2, 2008

Within the project I got to use a wide range of skills from Css to Flash As3. I started by setting up the wordpress environment and getting it ready for development. Once the site was in place it was required to produce a mini interactive tour of the bank. For this I decided to use flash As3 to keep in congress with the flash produced to handle the video content. As well as the code development of the site I was also able to get involved in creating the video content using Cs3 After Effects.
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Posted By: Craig on September 22, 2008

This website promoting poet Caroline Bird required us to put ourselves into the mindset of creating something for an individual, rather than a brand/company. Our approach was to provide a blank page so that the poetry would be the focus.
This was a technically interesting project… I chose Steven Sacks’ Gaia Flash Framework as a basis for the Flash build and built 3d assets in Swift. We used ActionScript 3 and PHP to code a Flash/Wordpress integration so that the site could be managed easily by Caroline.
Posted By: Craig on September 22, 2008

I conceived, designed and built this playable banner for Southern Trains. ‘Not for Lightweights’ is our approach to advertising an apprentice scheme for railway engineers. Targeted at 16 year olds, the apprenticeship programme is intensive and not for the those who want an easy option.
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Posted By: Craig on April 20, 2008

I decided to use JavaScript/Ajax to build this microsite, which employs an accordian-style navigation. The content of the site is light, so rather than creating a traditional navigation, we created this alternative stylistic navigating experience.
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Posted By: Craig on March 21, 2008

I worked on the concept, built a WordPress installation, used xhtml/css to build the theme and shot and edited an introductory video for this blog. Stafford Long wanted to promote their graduate recruitment marketing services - we identified the agency’s unique selling point in this area as having a dedicated resource (a Campus Analyst) who travels the country researching and gathering information on university campuses.
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Posted By: Craig on February 21, 2008

This was a little game that I conceived, designed and built after my agency said we need something for the festive season. I put the game was put together in a short time using Flash/AS2 and incorporating a crazy story and a few funny little characters.
Posted By: Craig on December 15, 2007

Elevation Networks is a student-led initiative to bridge the gap between employers and students from under-represented sections of society. Their objective is to bring people together through inspiration, to overcome barriers.
The website is based on a typical crowded notice board, along a busy university campus corridor. We also added in a green screen video shoot of students introducing different sections of the website.
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Posted By: Craig on September 21, 2007

This project had many interesting challenges as there were a wide range of technical design requirements. The site was built on a custom CMS designed in-house by a colleague using c#.net. I did a lot work on the site with Flash/AS2, JavaScript, XHTML and CSS.
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Posted By: Craig on August 20, 2007