PETER RICHARDSON
Year Graduation / Grade
1985 / 1st
Peter Richardson is currently a joint creative director at The Chase, one of the most awarded design consultants in the U.K. Peter took his first job in London at a small agency based in West London which specialised in premium packaging. After five years Peter ‘came back north’ to The Chase, where he still works and runs a small team of designers.
Career Profile
Springetts placement 1984
Peter Windett and Associates 1985 – 1989
The Chase 1989 – Present
Honors and Awards
2011 D&AD Silver (Writing for design) Posters
2011 Cannes Silver Typography
2011 Cannes Bronze Posters
2008 Fresh Creative Awards The Big F overall Winner
2008 Fresh Creative Awards Design for Print Gold
2008 Fresh Creative Awards Self Promotion Gold
2006 D&AD Graphic Design
2006 New York Festival World Gold Medal
2003 DBA Effectiveness Award Corporate Identity
2003 Design Week Annual Reports
2002 Cream Winner Annual Reports
2002 Roses Awards Winner Corporate Identity
2002 Consort Royal Awards Bronze Annual Reports
2002 Marketing Magazine Winner Corporate Identity
2000 D&AD Corporate Identity
1999 National Graphics Awards Annual Reports
1998/99 Donside National Graphics Awards Annual Reports
1995 National Graphics Awards Direct Mail
1995 Donside National Graphics Awards Bronze Direct Mail
1985 D&AD Student Award Highly Commended
How and where did you secure your first job?
My very first job was collecting money for a paper round for the local newsagents. I got paid £4.25. I then worked in my friends vacuum repair shop in Birkenhead. I’m pretty handy with a Hoover Junior. My first real job, of course was mentioned above, Peter Windett and Associates. Peter Windett was our external assessor at Preston and offered me a job. I felt privileged and flattered to be offered anything. Working on brands like Crabtree and Evelyn, Glenmorangie and Hediard in Paris was enormously educational. Getting into the London ‘scene’ was also very important at that time.
Do you think being a Preston student has benefited you in any way?
I hadn’t planned on going to Preston. It was luck or fate depending on your view. When I reached the end of a two year foundation course I was asked which college I was going to apply to. Mmmmm? I thought I wasn’t sure. Graduates these days seem so clued up and clear on their objectives, I just seemed to go with the flow. I applied to Norwich School of Art because I was going there on holiday. See what I mean. I failed to get in. I was then asked what my second choice was. Mmmmm? I thought again. I looked over at the list of colleges on the wall and saw Preston. Preston I said. Off I went. It was one the best decisions I’d ever made. It’s a cliche but I wouldn’t be where I am today without going there – sat on my backside in front of the telly to be exact.
How has the industry changed over the years in your experience?
From a purely commercial point of view it seems to have become tougher. Clients are more knowledgeable about the processes involved in design and desire clear commercial results, nothing wrong with that but when I started in the 80’s it felt like designers commanded more respect, some even becoming household names. I think clients were a little more in awe of our industry and it was a great time. Of course the other great change is the digital revolution. I remember when a hard drive meant holidaying in Cornwall.
Were do you get your ideas from? Do you prefer collaboration or thinking alone?
This is going to sound arrogant. And I’m not. When ‘Lovejoy’ the TV antiques dealer was asked how he made so much money so quickly from his knowledge of antiques, he said, “making £20,000 in 2 minutes may seem lucky but it took 30 years. It’s the same with me. No not making £20k, after 26 years of generating ideas it does come naturally, I should hope so! I do enjoy working with other good thinkers but equally happy thinking on my own.
What would you have done differently at University knowing what you know now?
If I’d have studied: marketing, business studies, economics, social history, commercial law, psychiatry and learnt photoshop then I think I may have been a better designer.
What’s the best thing about your job?
The ability to change and improve any business.
What would you say has been the key to your success so far?
Hard work, treating every job with same level of attention and always trying for the best solution possible.
What is the most unusual thing you have done in your career?
Going 36 hours without sleep to finish a print job for a corporate launch party then going to the party.
What do you look for in graduates and their portfolios?
Creativity, commitment and character.
Any advice for students entering the industry?
Consider all positions offered, don’t be too proud or set your sights too high, any job is better than none. Experience is key. Have the best portfolio possible, full of ideas and immaculately crafted. Never give up. Be yourself.
Yorkshire Water
Re-brand of the largest water utility company in the UK.

The Chase Calendar
A wall calendar that makes virtue of necessity. Providing a witty graphic solution to the problem of string intrusion.

Manchester Dog’s Home
Annual report and accounts.

Paul Thompson Photography
Promotional mailer that takes the notion of a picture being the summation of 1,000 words to its logical, tongue-in-cheek extreme. More here.

Woodland Trust
Identity for the UK’s leading woodland conservation charity.

Halliwell Landau
Identity for a UK Solicitors firm.

Wedding Invite
Simply removing the dot from the word ‘claire’ reveals the word ‘dave’ proving that they really were meant to be together.





























