We have been creating, growing and invigorating brands for over 30 years. We combine strategy and design to get results for our clients.

In this blog we share our thoughts, inspiration and things from behind the scenes at Stills - enjoy!

If you'd like to know a little bit more about Stills and what we do, give us a call on 029 2035 3940.

Interiors project wins award!

We’re thrilled to announce that the Winter Rule offices in Truro won the Michelmores Western Morning News Commercial Property Award for Project of the Year under £3million.

Winter Rule building

As well as being tasked with the interiors project, we started right at the beginning with Winter Rule, working with them to develop an effective brand. We’ve ensured this brand is reflected throughout every aspect of the building, as the more detailed interior shots show.

Winter Rule reception

Congratulations and well done to everyone involved!

Anyone for chess?

As part of the St David’s redevelopment, concrete and marble chess tables were commissioned in the area surrounding the Hayes Island Snack Bar and Stills were engaged to produce the chess pieces.

The wooden pieces are branded with St David’s colours and are housed in wooden boxes finished with St David’s branding.

A set of pieces can be hired out for a £10 deposit so maybe we’ll see you there for a game soon. Be warned - we have been practising…


Show me the way to St David’s

Stills has designed and produced a range of branded wayfaring signs for St David’s shopping centre and car park. A variety of applications have been used from stenciling onto the walls of the car park to applying vinyl direct to the glass front of the shopping centre.

Large scale bilingual signs welcome visitors to the car park and enable them to navigate through to the different parking levels, shops and restaurants.

An imaginative series of signs have been applied to the long spiraling car park ramp; messages such as ‘Going up!’ and ‘Nearly there!’ let shoppers know that they are about to reach the parking levels.



Take a look at some more signage photos on our Flickr account
. Even better, go and check out the signage in person - any excuse for some retail therapy…

Sparkling in South Wales

The Sparkle Appeal is a South Wales based charity with the aim of raising £1.5m to equip a purpose built centre that will help children with complex disabilities receive treatment, care, information and consultation all under one roof. 

In addition to helping children aged from 0 to 18, the centre will act as a support network for the family, enabling them to socialise together thanks to the range of leisure facilities available, including a wheelchair sports area and a MediCinema.

Stills has undertaken the branding of the project, from naming the centre and its rooms to devising a wayfinding and signage system for the centre. The centre has been named Serennu which means ‘to sparkle’ in Welsh and consequently the rooms have been named after constellations. A graphical representation of each constellation has been created to help users navigate their way around the centre.

We have also undertaken the interior design of the public areas and specified furniture, working closely with the Aneurin Bevan NHS Trust and specialist furniture manufacturers to ensure the needs of the children are met.

These photos give you an insight into the hard work Chris, Vicki and Kat have put into this project. The centre will be opened soon and we’ll be very proud when it does. Watch this space for photos of the finished centre.

Cycling Diary part 1: the training starts!

As our Managing Director Chris Carpenter will be cycling from North to South Wales for charity in April, we wanted to share his efforts with a regular diary here on our blog.

For the next few weeks Chris will be posting regular updates on where his training has taken him to - hopefully adding to the donations and inspiring budding cyclists to get on the road. You can sponsor Chris at the team’s Just giving page.

So, without further ado, here’s part one!

Thu 3 Feb
Newport to Caerleon and around the lovely new Business School/Art Faculty and then over the beautiful new footbridge. Doesn’t Newport look nice at night with the river up!

Fri 4 Feb
Inspired by Mr Sulley (from UHYPeacheys) cycling to work (he says its a great way get some training in and you don’t have to go out again on the bike in the evening), on Friday 4th I decided to have a go. I rode to Stills the Old Church in Canton from Caerleon setting off about 7am into the teeth of a gale - 17 miles later I was there. It took 1hr 35min in the morning but on the way back with a great tailwind it only took me 1hr 9mins, it was like having a motor on the back – its ok though as I have been told that its flat in North Wales and there’s no wind.

Sun 6 Feb
Thought I’d better get some more miles in as the realisation that day 2 of the ride is 91miles (I am a bit scared). So I did Caerleon to Usk on the Old Bulmore Road through the Ryder Cup course. 25 miles through gorgeous countryside but very windy again and to be honest I had almost decided to give up and not do the ride as the wind nearly go the better of me. But by Tuesday as I did the cycle to and from work again I felt fine again all enthusiastic. I will be like that – a mixture of good and bad days.

Cycling Diary pt. 2



Feb 12

I did 38 miles on Saturday from Caerleon to Caldicot picking up sustrans 4 in Newport, through the marshlands, out past the severn bridge tolls on to Caldicot and back in 3hrs 15mins. Lovely day mostly flat but into a headwind on the way home.

Sustrans 4 actually goes from Fishguard to London – maybe that one is for next year!



I am just riding on my own at the moment, so I am looking forward to hooking up with the other participants on some group training rides soon.

Cycling Diary pt 3: Blaenavon

Pontypool to Blaenavon trail

I cycled to Higher Blaenavon from Caerleon and back on Saturday - 39 miles. First bit to Griffithstown was on the canal and then it was along the old railway track – Sustrans 49. It was an amazing ride only downside was the slow uphill 11mile section from Pontypool to Blaenavon.

Lakes above Big Pit

Then on the way home I got a puncture and had to stop every 10 minutes to pump up my tyre, still I got home without having to call out my support team. But it meant I was quite slow and was out for 4.15mins.

Also last week went to physiotherapist Jon Baldwin for an assessment – who was amazing by the way, anyone who hasn’t gone should go asap (he works at Vale Healthcare). Anyway he told me I wasn’t as tight as the others he’d seen – can’t imagine what he meant really…

See more photos from the ride on Flickr

Inspiration from Milan Furniture Fair

If you just want to look at office furniture go to NeoCon or Orgatec, if you want an exciting, inspirational experience which stimulates all your senses, then get yourself to Milan. I’m not talking about the main show ‘Saloni di mobile’ but I do mean the ‘temporary design museum’ and the rest of Via Tortona; where mainline corporates such as Poltrona Frau, Canon, Lammaults and Blackberry choose to rub shoulders with students, start-ups, artists and fashion houses.

Day one for us started in the main showhalls and to be fair the exhibition was excellent; in particular the domestic and lighting halls clearly demonstrated the Italian’s ability to be high design one moment and high kitsch the next. Although not nearly as busy as the main show (which was rammed) the office salon with the likes of Boss and Humanscale were clearly happy with the results. Overall, the show was noticeably busier this year, more international and less domestic.

 

We started our Via Tortona experience on day two in a rundown room staring in wonder at a tabletop full of flashing, dancing Anglepoise lamps appearing to have minds of their own. In fact their bobbing, weaving and bulbs were being controlled independently by the power of tweets. Who knows what we will be able to control with the power of positive or negative thoughts over the internet in the future. In an adjacent space a student from Germany had created a plant pot that walked slowly towards the light. A group of plants moving across the office in an apparent expression of free will may well raise eyebrows. In this environment they raised only smiles.


Is all this conceptual stuff relevant? Who knows what commercial application an interesting idea will spark. The beauty of some of the more conceptual ideas on display in Via Tortona is that they were not shackled by the need to make money. And yet the great thing about Milan is that some of the more enlightened manufacturers wanted to be associated with the excitement. Lammaults for instance had, after 10 years, moved into Via Tortona especially so that their brand could be seen as more inventive.

Further along Via Tortona, at the entrance to the ‘Temporary Museum for New Design’ in Superstudio PIU; above Karim Rashid’s outdoor furniture, we were greeted by a huge mobile of real minis suspended from a crane. Next was an otherworldly Japanese experience from Kanega in a series of blacked-out rooms lit only by thousands of flat LEDs. We were encouraged to drink freely from bottles of Saki as the colours changed, dimmed and brightened in a hypnotic and magical manner. A sensory delight to say the least.

Amongst many others of note were Foscarini; the lighting magicians with displays that forced you lie on your back and look up at their jellyfish-like creations.

We breezed through Tom Dixon’s, Blackberry sponsored building and then onto the DesignJunction exhibition; a loose collection of companies successfully flying the British design flag in Milan and supported by UK Trade International. This show was housed in the spectacular Zegna building and the exhibitors included Channels, Benchmark and Welsh weavers Melin Tregwynt. We ended day two as we started by talking about lamps and in particular, the new Type ‘C’ lamp from Anglepoise.

On the way home we couldn’t resist the Toshiba strobe-light rain show. In the street party that we got caught up in on our way back to the hotel, it was so busy with hoards of delirious design disciples that it took us half an hour to go 400 metres.

Day three, our last, saw us at the Triennale which houses the permanent Design Museum. Following a trip through a red tunnel, past soft cactus balls and into the mind of Mauritzio Galante; the rest of the visit was dominated by the Interface show, which was a triumph of brand building and positioning. For me, the mere fact that Interface commissioned an art installation in a Design Museum signaled to everyone the direction and ambition it has for its brand. The wit and intelligence of the designer Francesco Bandini, to display flooring so that it could only be viewed by looking at its reflection in the mirrored ceiling, was breathtakingly simply and amusing – literally turning your expectations on their head.

So, if you can, I urge you to visit Milan when the furniture and design show is on. Where else in the world can you pay 1 euro to jump on a 1930’s tram, jump off into a park and walk into a Design Museum where you see some office carpet reflected into a mirrored ceiling; then walk through a womblike tunnel to see a marble Poltrona Frau armchair. Nip outside to have a drink at the Campari bar followed by poached egg and asparagus cooked on a solar barbeque? Only one word sums up the experience: GENIUS!

The challenge for Clerkenwell Design week is not to try and be just like Milan; that would be like trying to make pasta with potatoes. You’d just end up with gnocchi and who really enjoys that?

Clerkenwell Design week has had the confidence to forge it’s own identity. It needs to continue to be inventive, inclusive and relevant. It is part of London, itself a fashion and design capital of the world and like Milan some of the creative stardust may well rub off on it. Importantly everyone should have high hopes of how it can grow and flourish. The seeds of inspiration should continue to be planted with enthusiasm. 

Check out all the amazing sights from this year’s festival on our Flickr page