James Music had decades of trust and a community that genuinely loved the place. The brief wasn't reinvention — it was building a visual identity as authoritative as their reputation, and campaigns that could speak to two very different audiences without ever feeling split.
A logotype that had to read at four feet on a high-street window before it ever got to a screen. We worked the design at scale first — and only refined for digital after the wall version sang.
Most logos are designed in software, then re-tested at print size as an afterthought. We worked the other way round.
The script reads with the same authority on light and dark — the curve weights tuned to hold up in both. That mattered more for this client than most: the brand had to live on a black shopfront, on white print collateral, on a vinyl bag, on a t-shirt, and on a 70s-style poster — without ever feeling inconsistent.
Coherence at every contrast. A test that proves an identity is more than a logo file.
"Your Place in the Symphony" for classical players. "Find Your Sound" for beginners and rock players. Same visual language, different tone — built together, not retrofitted.
A real identity system isn't a logo and a colour. It's a set of decisions that hold together when you push them in opposite directions.
Same red. Same logotype lockup. Same large image-block-with-typography composition. Same sense that the brand is in conversation with the player, not selling at them.
What changes is the cultural register: orchestral score-and-conductor for the symphony audience, festival-stage Hendrix for the beginners. Same studio. Same rules. A different room.
The completed shopfront — every spec made for the physical space first. Print, vinyl, awning, window-graphic, all working together. The test that proves an identity is more than a logo file.
Elysium Gallery Studios
210 High Street
Swansea, SA1 1PE
Booking Q3 2026