toadshow capability · saunders havill group modernisation of the existing saunders havill identity...
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ToadShow Capability
www.ToadShow.com.au
• Quality • Local knowledge • Leadership • Innovation • Affordability
publications
visual identity services
interpretive displays
image creation
multimedia
Glass House Mountains Visitor and Interpretive Centre.
Formed in Brisbane in 1986, ToadShow is led by Anne Jones and Robert Whyte (supported by a freelance team of writers, researchers, designers and illustrators) creating great design for clients.
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leadership
Anne JonesAnne is a writer, designer and project manager. Her specialist skills include journalism, print production and project management.
Award � 2009 Queensland Museum Medal.
Appointments � 2011 onwards, Independent Director, Healthy Waterways Ltd.
Robert WhyteRob is a writer and designer. Rob leads our research and content creation.
Qualification � Graduate Diploma in Professional Art Studies, Alexander Mackie College (now University of Western Sydney) 1981.
scoping � strategy � stakeholder engagement
� audience analysis � themes, styles, key messages
� detailed costings � project documentation
� client presentations
content creation � research, writing, images, movies, original music
� experts in cultural, environmental and political history
� storytelling with flair and insight
design � design audits � branding � typography � page design � animation � interactivity � templates � training
production � preproduction and printing
� editing and proofreading
� fabrication, equipment sourcing, manufacture and installation
� fit-outs, testing and maintenance
project management
� project planning � budgets and schedules
� management and coordination
� production specification
� contract documentation
� regulatory compliance
� marketing and media
our services
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Visual identities are the most challenging and rewarding projects a graphic designer can undertake. It’s the task every designer loves.
visual identity
Museums and Galleries Queensland
A subtle letter combination using colour blocks with the ampersand reversed, evoking pictures on the wall.
Donna McDonald
Exclamation mark, paper, inkwell and pen are combined here in a logo for a writer and artist.
Saunders Havill Group
Modernisation of the existing Saunders Havill identity in elegant shapes and type lifted the brand's visibility.
Hinkler Hall of Aviation
Inspired by Hinkler's study of the flight of the Australian Ibis in both shape and design, the wing motif was the work of Sasha Middleton.
Health Fusion
Interconnected people shapes in shared colours representing networks – a new take on time-honoured concepts.
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Media Potential
MP's modernist digital expertise is displayed in its visual branding and typography.
Stirling Hinchliffe
Stirling's consultancy opening to revealing the letters S and H, simple and powerful.
Mark Crocker Photographer
A subtle, powerful camera graphic in Mark's business initials with an elegant use of reversals.
Yvana Jones
Completing the circle with a twist for Yvana's education consultancy, her logo is timeless and beautiful.
Gilkerson Legal
Once again working with grids, squares and subtle shifts of alignment combined with bold shifts in colour. This logo stands out from the crowd.
Media PotentialP 07 3511 3455F 07 3368 7409M 0412 711 909E [email protected] @whitingjillian
Jillian WhitingDirector
0403 417 257 [email protected] www.markcrocker.com.au
Mark CrockerPhotographer
Stirling Hinchliffe
0418 983 654
www.stirlinghinchliffe.com
PO Box 5864 Stafford Heights Q 4053
Government | Infrastructure | Indigenous
Government | Infrastructure | Indigenous
Oliver GilkersonLegal Practice Director
P 07 3221 5165 | F 07 3221 2328 E [email protected] | W www.gilkersonlegal.com.au
Level 9, 344 Queen Street, Brisbane Qld 4001 GPO Box 598, Brisbane Qld 4001
ABN 33 101 192 376
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Newsletters work
If you want to make an impression and if connecting really matters, something physical in the hand can make the difference.
Books
In the digital age when products are transitory books are one of the most effective ways to make a lasting impression.
publications
Australian Bananas
Bananas are the biggest selling single line in Australian supermarkets. Growers are kept up to date with communications from the Australian Banana Growers' Council.
The Advocate
The Advocate is the primary communication between the RTBU and the Union’s 10,000 members. Our Autumn Advocate won Best Small Union Journal at the 2015 Labour Day Media Awards.
Nurses Union
Union training programs are the key to career advancement. We produce two each year for the Queensland Nurses Union, always employing a dramatic cover image.
Hopeful harvestTrial blocks yield answers in the search for disease-resistant varieties
Page 10 Banana Freckle eradication
Page 20 Retail campaign
Page 22 China-Philippines study tour
BananasAustralian
Issue 40, Summer 2013-2014
Course title:
Course date/s:
Location of course:
Membership No:
Name:
Address:
Postcode:
Phone No: (h) (w)
Mobile:
Email:
Workplace:
Current position:
Unit:
IMPORTANT PLEASE RETURN THIS FORM TO THE QNU AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. Enrolments should be received 10 days before commencement of the course. Should you experience delays in receiving employer advice concerning approval of paid leave, accommodation or travel assistance, contact the QNU ASAP. Send enrolments to: QNU GPO Box 1289, Brisbane Q 4001 or Fax (07) 3217 2794
Who can attend? All QNU members can attend our union training courses. QNU courses recognise the needs of nurses as employees and aim to equip members to further develop the necessary skills and knowledge required by employees to participate in and effectively contribute to workplace change.
QNU members in management positions who are seeking information and education to further develop their understanding of industrial issues from a management perspective should contact their employer for information regarding appropriate management training programs.
What does it cost?There is no cost, QNU training is included in your union membership.
Paid leave provisions – public sector: All nurses working in the public sector are entitled to PAID Leave as part of their current employment conditions. This provision allows for members to attend Trade Union Training for up to 5 working days per calendar year. (Refer to QH – HR Policy C39 Industrial Relations Education Leave).
This leave is not Conference Leave or Professional Development Leave, it is specifically for Industrial Relations Education Leave and cannot be unreasonably refused by your employer. If you experience delays or any difficulty getting paid Industrial Relations Education Leave, contact your QNU Organiser or the Training Unit immediately.
Paid leave provisions – private sector:Many agreements in the private sector have member provisions for Education. For specific information about your entitlements call QNU Connect on (07) 3099 3210 or toll free 1800 177 273.
How to enrolComplete the attached enrolment form and send it to the Brisbane Office as soon as possible – GPO Box 1289, Brisbane Q 4001 or Fax (07) 3217 2794. To ensure a place on the course send your enrolment in to QNU now and apply for leave from your employer at the same time.
Members can also enrol by logging onto the QNU website www.qnu.org.au/qnu-training
Travel, accommodation and child careMembers requiring travel or accommodation assistance in order to participate, should in the first instance, make application to their employer as some courses may be funded by the employer. Child care will generally only be available on the basis of reimbursement of additional costs.
Requests for QNU assistance with travel, accommodation and child care must be made prior to the commencement of the course, by contacting the QNU Training Unit on (07) 3840 1431 or toll free 1800 177 273.
For more information please contact Helena Dalton-Bridges, Education Officer, in the QNU Brisbane Office on (07) 3840 1431 or speak to your Union Organiser.
values and interests
Queensland Nurses’ Union of Employees, 187 Melbourne Street, West End Q 4101
(07) 3840 1444 or 1800 177 273 www.qnu.org.au
Authorised by B. Mohle, Secretary Queensland Nurses’ Union of Employees, December 2011.
professional, social,
promoting and defending the industrial,
political and democratic
of members
enrolment nomination enrolment information
union training programJANUARY – JUNE
2012
Employer category: (please tick)
Public Hospital Private Hospital Aged Care
Community Domiciliary
Other: (please specify)
Nursing classification
Did you apply for paid leave from your employer to attend?
Yes No
Was it granted?
Yes No Not advised
Position held in QNU: (eg Workplace Rep, Branch Official, Member)
How long held?
Do you require accommodation?
Yes No
Which nights do you require?
Do you require assistance with travel?
Yes No
The QNU Training Unit will contact you regarding your travel arrangements.
He’s against them, but what would
Malcolm Turnbull know about
PENALTY RATES?
In this issue...
Gold Coast Light RailPage 2
National CouncilPage 4
Penalty RatesPage 7
Women in the UnionPage 8
Northern ReportPage 14-15
Southern ReportPage 16-17
Tram & Bus ReportPage 18-19
Central ReportPage 20-21
THE ADVOCATE UNION NEWS ISSUE 12.3 SUMMER 2015
JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALIAN RAIL TRAM AND BUS UNION QUEENSLAND BRANCH
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Murilla’s first 100 years
A 48-page hardcover lavishly illustrated with stunning photographs by Peter O’Halloran, presenting its history as art.
Cane Toad Times
Recognised by the State Library of Queensland as genuine mainstream culture in a time of conservative rule, the Cane Toad Times is a testament to its era.
Queensland Club
A prestige limited edition of the club's history. A leather-bound collector's edition sold out immediately.
Police Union history
Robert Allen and Chris Forrester authored this history of the Queensland Police Union for its 2015 centenary.
The Q
ueensland Club Sesquicentenary: 1859 – 2009
John McN
eil Cam
pbell
Cover photo: The Queensland Club viewed from the Botanic Gardens, 15 October 1894. Image courtesy of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland.
Sesquicentenary: 1859 – 2009
The Queensland ClubThe Author
Spanning one hundred years of club membership and four generations, John McNeil Campbell is the third generation, a past president and son of another president, also named John McNeil Campbell.
The first Campbell was a banker, the second was deeply involved in Queensland’s grazing industry, while the writer of this history is a medico.
He was educated at the Ascot State School, Toowoomba Prep, Church of England Grammar School and the University of Queensland.
He started his adult life working in his family’s tannery business, later a shoe factory, with a period as a travelling salesman. He switched to medicine aged 23, graduating in 1958. Later he became an obstetrician and gynaecologist and finally superintendent of the Royal Women’s Hospital.
He was for many years Chairman of the Queensland Family Planning Association and is a director of the Queensland Cancer Council and the Geriatric Medical Foundation.
The Queensland Club has been one of his major interests and he has written many anecdotes about the institution and its personalities, some of which are contained in this volume.
John is married to Margaret, an “Accredited Lady”, and has four grown children. His only son, also John McNeil Campbell, is a member of the Club, making up the fourth generation. John is hospitable, with an engaging personality, an intriguing sense of the ridiculous, extremely well read, with a great knowledge and sense of history. He is the quintessential Club man and there is no one more appropriate to update the Club’s history in this, the Club’s sesquicentenary year.
John, in his 80th year, is inspirational, and it is an exceptional feat for somebody to remain so focused for so long. He has brought what can be a somewhat dour and staid subject to life and with his unique turn of phrase has produced a “great read”.
Ross Douglas
All history’s but the acts of men, A record of who where and when And how we came to this estate; What truly can we celebrate?
Our Club was founded long ago By men whom but as names we know And other men, some still alive Have toiled that it may grow and thrive.
So celebrate the fact that we Enjoy their generous legacy.
T. M. Parnell
The Queensland Club1859 - 2009
This volume is issued to commemorate 150 years of a Club which has coexisted with the development of the Colony and State of Queensland.
Based originally on the London Gentlemen’s Clubs, this Club has had some 4000 members which have included graziers, servicemen, politicians and men from most walks of life, many of whom have made singular contributions to the State’s development.
It is precisely for this reason that (with one exception) it has been decided not to select any members for extended biographies as such a selection would raise significant problems. We believe we have a complete list of all members with their occupation given at their election. Some anecdotes are included and the endpapers are taken from an early “suggestion book” (really complaints!).
A Centenary History of the Queensland Police Union of
Employees 1915 – 2015By Robert Allen and Chris Forrester
A Centenary History of the Queensland Police Union of
Employees 1915 – 2015By Robert Allen and Chris Forrester
From Strength to Strength
From Strength to Strength
From Strength to Strength A Centenary History of the QPUE 1915 – 2015
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May Day
We captured images of Annastacia amongst friends at May Day, celebrating Labour Day at its proper time of year.
Botanical Art
Robert Whyte's images of flowers are not only gaspingly beautiful, they are scientific records of never-before photographed desert plants now going to the Western Australia FloraBase.
The mighty Bunya
These ice rings around the sun are rare events, completing the backdrop for a stunning portrait for our multimedia project On the Bunya Trail.
Members speak up
Union members were not happy with a rather meagre proposal presented by their employer and made their feelings known. The poor deal was rejected and replaced by a better one.
We produce studio, portrait, event, macro and panoramic photography.
Our network of freelance artists produce still and animated illustrations.
image creation
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3D fly-through
We showcased our proposed installations and exhibits for Hinze Dam's Numinbah Valley Interpretive Centre in a 3D animated fly-through.
Out of this world?
No, the salt lake above is just in a very remote part of Australia, eleven hours drive west of Alice Springs. These salt lakes in the Gibson made for great aerials taken by Robert Whyte while participating in a biodiversity exploration.
Office life animated
Sasha Middleton's illustrations of everyday office workers star in scenes for the Ethicos Fairness Toolkit iPhone app to help staff and management diagnose difficult workplace situations.
Wings in flight
Max Bannah created a hand-drawn animated film for the Hinkler Hall of Aviation, morphing the lifelike Sacred Ibis into the stylised visual identity.
Hound of Music
Damien Ledwich's take on Julie Andrews as a werewolf advertised our sell-out show at the Princess Theatre in 1986.
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Audio and moving visual content as well as text and still images delivered by digital media can offer depth where there is not enough wall space to tell the whole story.
In museums, multimedia often works best in tandem with display panels, real objects and built installations.
Sigrid power
We hired the amazing star power of Siggy for an 8-minute documentary telling the story of Old Government House.
Glasshouse Mountains
Our tourism hub for Glasshouse combines touchscreens with an iMac to explore history, nature and destinations for the region.
Forceful the Tug
Forceful the steam tug is docked at the Maritime Museum on the Brisbane River. Our multimedia and signage celebrate the history Brisbane's first dry dock and the vessels it welcomed.
multimedia
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John Flynn Place
Cloncurry was the birthplace of the Flying Doctor Service, a visionary idea inspired by World War One pilot Clifford Peel. We created the original panels in 1987 and were invited back in 2015 for a refresh and technology upgrade featuring a mini-theatre, touchscreens, and John Flynn's Magic Lantern slideshow. It won a gold National Trust award for best interpretation and promotion.
Science on screen
Lamington touchscreens help interpret the amazing beauty of these complex rainforests.
IPhone app
Our short animated films are the core assets for the iPhone app and system risk diagnostic learning modules we designed for the Ethicos Group.
Kiwirrkurra community
While on a federally-funded biodiversity discovery expedition at Kiwirrkurra Robert Whyte made a 20 minute movie of the science being done and interactions with the local community.
Evidence-based tools for managing
organisational integrity
Integrity
SYSTEM-RISK DIAGNOSTICS
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At the heart of our work with regional museums and visitor centres are large format panels with the images, anecdotes, history and special facts that bring the exhibit to life and inspire interest and enthusiasm.
interpretive displays
Trade Coast Central Heritage Park
The story of Brisbane's first airport at Eagle Farm unfolds into a convict past, Australia's aviation history and World War Two secrets. Our centre piece life-size palisade of sharpened poles is a huge hit.
Glasshouse Touchscreen
Touchscreens deliver a bigger bang for your buck with skim, browse and delve layers. This one is a guide to the mountains themselves.
Wyaralong Dam signage
Nestled at the foot of the scenic rim, on Teviot Brook, Wyaralong Dam is a popular recreation getaway.
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Mountains emergeAfter the big volcano dies, the area is quiet. No more volcanoes erupt. Wind and water slowly wear away the ground, uncovering the volcanic plugs.
Over 25 million years pass before our species – Homo sapiens – appears. Ice ages come and go. The sea level falls and rises, causing further erosion until the landscape we see today emerges as the Glass House Mountains. Even now, the land continues to change.
Glass House Mountainsborn in fire
Birth of the MountainsThe land where this building stands is one kilometre underwater. Australia is not a separate island. It is part of the super-continent called Gondwanaland.
Tectonic plates push sedimentary rock layers up to form the Conondale Range. The land is now above the sea.
The Gympie area is an island. It is pushed into the mainland by tectonic plate movement. During this process, gold forms in quartz rock veins.
Australia separates from Antarctica. It looks like the island we know today.
Mammals inherit the Earth.
Volcanoes pour out super-hot ash, laying down ignimbrite rock across the region.
A huge volcano bursts out of the ground south of Maleny. The entire region is covered with a layer of rich basalt lava.
The Gondwanaland climate is mild. The land is covered with large forests. Dinosaurs rule the Earth.
Magma squeezes up into the vents and fractures of the dying volcano, cooling to form the Glass House Mountains plugs. All these plugs are probably underground except the largest, Mount Beerwah, which emerges as a small volcanic cone.
A large asteroid hits the Earth, causing a mass extinction. The dinosaurs are wiped out.
250 million years ago
235 million years ago
212 million years ago
200 million years ago
65 million years ago
45 million years ago
50 million years ago
31 million years ago
26 million years ago
300 million years ago
Numinbah Valley
Our Hinze Dam interpretive display goes to the heart of the water story, covering history, technology and nature in panels and an atmospheric movie.
Hinkler Hall of Aviation
The Hinkler Hall features full-size models and a giant globe theatrette combined with dioramas, interactive contraptions, wall panels, touchscreens, multimedia and memorabilia.
Signage
Interpretive signage adds a pictorial theme to the exploration and learning experience.
Dinosaurs
Who can resist a dinosaur. Kids, big and little, love 'em.
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Company structure
ToadShow Pty Ltd is a privately owned company registered in Queensland.
ABN 63 073 488 114
Directors:
Anne Jones, Robert Whyte
Contact details
ToadShow office and postal address: 917 Waterworks Road The Gap QLD 4061
Telephone: 07 3300 3939
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.toadshow.com.au
Public liability insurance
Insurer: AON Policy Number: 15T0155158
Limit of Indemnity: $5,000,000 any one occurrence (except Products risk which is any one period of insurance)
Underwriter: Vero, CGU, Allianz
WorkCover
Insurer: WorkCover Queensland Policy Number: WAA870209191
Workplace health and safety
ToadShow’s Workplace Health and Safety Policy ensures all directors, employees, visitors and contractors are provided with a safe and healthy work environment pursuant to Queensland law.
Quality assurance
ToadShow has a self-assessed quality system which conforms to AS/NZS ISO 9002: 1994 and has been specifically developed to cover all the work we do. We are currently in the process of upgrading that system to ISO 9001:2008.
All project documentation is prepared to conform with Australian drawing standards AS1100 and for compliance with ISO 9001 series for project documentation.
company information
www.ToadShow.com.au