Showcase & Discover Creative Work Sign Up For Free
Hiring Talent? Post a Job

Showcase & Discover Creative Work

Want to Learn More?

Night Club / Bar Posters

  • Posters are my favourite media to design because creativity and design principles are used the greatest here. Below illustrates a sample collection of my poster design work with night club/bar events in London, Ontario and surrounding areas. 
  • This is an obscure and creative poster developed for Windsor, Ontario's Rise Niteclub, and their weekly event, Popular Saturdays. The poster effectively utilizes negative space as a means for design rather than merely a background. The goal for the poster was to create something fun and playful, bursting with excitement. As a result, I took references from water, hydraulic machinery and bokeh dots in creating something interesting, wild, uncontrolled, and unsystematic. The colour choices garner immediate attention.
  • This is an ultramodern, vector-based poster created for Project BE and Lavish Nightclub's speed dating event. The main image is abstract and fluorescent, composing brush strokes in both wavy and jagged forms. The yellow scribbles is strikingly arresting, adding to the weird artistic flair. This all helps appeal to a younger, visual demographic. Some type layering is utilized to control focus and generate emphasis in the title.
  • This is a grunge inspired poster for Lavish Night Club's Back to School Fashion Show, breathing more brightness than darkness, but still utilizing some grunge elements. The poster is kinetic and lively, exercising shades of yellow in direct relation to the sun. The poster is also created to instill a sense of enthusiasm and anticipation in students returning back to school.
  • This is an ultramodern, vector-based poster created for Project BE and Lavish Nightclub's speed dating event. The main image is abstract and fluorescent, composing brush strokes in both wavy and jagged forms. The yellow scribbles is strikingly arresting, adding to the weird artistic flair. This all helps appeal to a younger, visual demographic. Some type layering is utilized to control focus and generate emphasis in the title.
  • Pretty in Pink was a charitable fashion show, with attention to breast cancer awareness. The event took place at Lavish Nightclub, which targets a specific image-centric demographic that I took into consideration. Using pink as the predominant colour, I illustrated a young woman with her hair covering her eyes. This symbolic image represents people's perceptions of the illness, for better or for worse. Originated from type, the design on the lower half of the poster is trendy, erratic, and fun. The overall poster sheds a positive light on breast cancer and encourages potential visitors.