A KYU Design is founded on the idea that visual communication is about clearly and efficiently conveying complex concepts while breathing life and energy into your story, your products, and your ideas. That requires someone who can communicate with healthcare providers, engineers, scientists, executives, sales teams, marketing specialists, advertising teams, techies, newbies, and most importantly…your defined audience.
A KYU Design was founded by Adam Questell with a genuine excitement about medicine, science, and technology. That excitement tempered with an objective and analytical approach based on more than 20 years of experience leads to seamless integration with your team and an easy working relationship. There is no “buzzword bingo” just careful thought, rolled up sleeves, a smile, and results.
To view more portfolio samples of medical illustration, medical animation, scientific illustration, technical illustration, and technical animation from Adam Questell and A KYU Design just reach out.
Everything done in-house at A KYU Design rolls through a digital 3D pipeline. This visual process is kept simple, lean, and agile for everyone involved. That all starts with visual communication.
COMMUNICATE – Listen and respond not react. This is the time to objectively gather the known and unknown so we can bridge the gap between what you have and what you need. This is the time to ask as many questions as necessary and evaluate what is being said in order to bring clarity to the big picture and the details.
EXECUTE – Take what you have learned and apply the magic. This is the complex part of the process. It may involve storylines, storyboards, idea or mood boards, look and feel development, voice talent in the case of animations, asset gathering, photography, CG modeling, texturing, lighting, cameras, key-framing, rendering, animatics, effects, compositing, exporting, and compressing. It is my job to keep this as customized and streamlined as necessary to reach the common goal.
REPEAT UNTIL COMPLETE – This is the time to evaluate what we are seeing and determine what is working and what is not. After careful feedback, communication, and execution it’s time to take the imagery across the finish line. The image is complete when it is right.