logo
We begin every project with the goal of creating a timeless and sustainable solution to the challenges of our ever-changing world of digital and traditional media. We thrive off of new developments in design, research and experimentation, using and repurposing various platforms and media networks.


Anyone can throw a party. Events these days shouldn’t be limited to the typical bar and pony show (although that can be really fun, too, of course). We like to look beyond the obvious, creating unusual events that define brands as well as drawing likeminded companies together to combine forces. This can be anything from staging an improvisational street scene to a grand red carpet event - or we might use a lovely purple or blue instead.


Wikipedia defines marketing as “the process associated with promoted for sale goods or services. It is considered a social and managerial process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating and exchanging products and values with others.” Are you bored yet? We are.


We don’t like that branding these days is often seen as a form of mass mind manipulation. We think that branding is an opportunity to creatively sum up what your company does and is in one fell swoop. The value of a product should be truly represented to the consumer, so that they feel consistently satisfied. We feel that creative branding is a way to tell people in an honest way what you are really about.


It’s all about making things look good. It’s about having taste. It’s about being able to curate objects to facilitate a look that is authentic to the story you are trying to tell. It’s about knowing what was, is, and will be important to people, to strike a chord in their hearts and minds.


This is the basis of our philosophy - what media is when it’s at its best. Slow media takes all the elements of traditional and new media and runs it through a filter of quality, acknowledging that the next best thing is often something that’s already been done. In the words of Monocle Magazine, “…the belief that the physical’s gone and died, that paper’s past it and that books belong in a museum was premature.”