Whether designing arts experiences for health infrastructure, or developing visual identities, we apply the same attentive core values of observation, patience and ecological thinking.
We believe that the most transformative design solutions come to life when we honour the relationship between people, place, and purpose.
Connected to the rhythms and landscapes of the wide horizons we call home, we bring a unique perspective to every project.
Our creative practice is nourished by the natural world we live and breathe - where patience yields beauty, adaptation breeds resilience, and interconnectedness creates strength.
By partnering with like-minded co-creators, we build creative ecosystems that support the full spectrum of our clients' needs while remaining true to our regional roots.
Every program is an opportunity to cultivate deeper connections—between organisations and their communities, between people and their environments, between ideas and their visual expression.
We want to leave behind a legacy we can be proud of which is why we choose to work with good people and organisations doing good things.
Here are some of our favourites.
Griffith Base Hospital: Co-created Envirographics
Two years of creative chaos, countless croissants, and complete commitment later, 'Are We There Yet?' a body of work co-created with Griffith Schools has been installed as envirographics across 90 square metres of corridors and ceilings within the Paediatric In-patient unit.
It’s a celebration of the joyous moments we experience as children on our journey’s to visit loved ones. It’s a collection of moments to remind us as adults, *why* we journey in the first place.
Awe. Connection. Identity.
Wagga Base Hospital: Co-created Envirographics
Most clinical environments are dominated by hard surfaces and cold tones which can further compound an already frightening experience.
For most of us, this is a foreign environment that we do not generally encounter on a daily basis. By providing something familiar such as a story with colour and relatable characters that would be part of a ‘normal’ everyday environment for a child, we are working to alleviate some of the anxiety and stress that may be experienced during a hospital admission.
Our approach
to co-creation is grounded in care, responsiveness and respect for lived experience.
Working with children, families and staff in healthcare settings requires an ethic that prioritises listening over extraction, and relationship over outcome.
Co-creation in this context is not about authorship or representation, but about creating the conditions for people to contribute safely, comfortably and at their own pace.
We approach co-creation as an iterative and responsive process. Contributions are welcomed without pressure for originality, clarity or completion. Repetition, copying, revision and pause are understood as meaningful forms of expression rather than limitations to be corrected.
Children’s contributions are held lightly and interpreted with care. They are not positioned as data, nor used to make claims beyond what the context allows. Ambiguity is protected, and imperfection is honoured as part of ethical practice.
The resulting artwork is not intended to resolve experience, but to sit alongside care. It will support comfort, familiarity and hope without adding emotional burden to those already navigating complex circumstances.