Calgary Graphic Design
That Goes Beyond the Logo
Most design problems we get called on aren't logo problems. They're system problems. The logo looks fine. The sell sheet looks like a different company made it. The pitch deck looks like a third company made it. The Instagram grid looks like nobody's in charge.
Graphic design in Calgary, the way we treat it, means building every asset a brand touches so it reads as one business. Not five freelancers stitched together. If you need a mark and nothing else, head over to our Logo Design Calgary page. Otherwise, you're on the right page.
Design Work for
Calgary Businesses
Most Calgary businesses come to us needing more than one thing. A new restaurant in Inglewood needs menus, signage, and an Instagram feed that doesn't look like a Canva afterthought. A consulting firm downtown needs a pitch deck that holds up next to the big national firms. We handle the whole spread.
Brand Collateral
Business cards, letterhead, email signatures, one-pagers β the everyday pieces your team hands out and sends without thinking. If the underlying mark needs work first, that's a logo design conversation before we build the system around it.
Print & Large Format
Brochures, retractable banners, building signage, vehicle wraps for trades and service fleets, and full trade show kits for companies exhibiting at the BMO Centre.
Packaging & Labels
Local food and beverage brands selling through Calgary independents or pushing for shelf space with CrossIron Mills retailers. Dielines, mockups, print-ready files, the works.
Digital Assets
Social templates your marketing coordinator can actually use, paid ad creative built per platform, web graphics, and presentation decks that look intentional past slide three.
Editorial & Reports
Annual reports, white papers, and research documents for Calgary law firms, engineering consultancies, and energy companies who need long-form documents to read as carefully as they're written.
Campaign Systems
Full campaign layouts that thread one visual language through print, digital, signage, and social. If it carries your brand and a Calgary client sees it, we design it.
The Types of Graphic Design
(and Which One You Need)
Most people who call us say "I need a graphic designer" when what they actually need is one specific discipline. Here's how the field breaks down so you can self-identify before the first call. Knowing the category sharpens the brief. A sharper brief means a faster, cheaper project.
Logos, colour systems, typography rules. The foundation everything else sits on. If you're starting from scratch, begin with custom logo design and build outward.
Social creative, Google display banners, sales sheets, trade show pull-ups. Built to sell, not just look pretty.
Screens, app flows, dashboard layouts. Different brain entirely from print, and we treat it that way.
Annual reports, magazines, long-form PDFs. Energy companies in Calgary still need this constantly.
Dielines, label compliance, shelf presence. Critical if you're a CPG brand pitching into Calgary Co-op or Sobeys.
Animated logos, explainer videos, social reels. The pieces that need to move to hold attention.
Wayfinding, signage, retail interiors. If you're opening a storefront near Sunridge Shopping Centre or Marlborough Mall, this is the discipline that turns square footage into a brand experience.
Design Principles We Apply
to Every Project
Good design isn't decoration. It's a set of decisions you can defend. Every project that moves through our Sunridge studio runs through the same working principles β whether it's a Marlborough-area restaurant menu or a campaign for a contractor working sites across the NE. We start with the rule of three: three logo concepts, three headline options, three colour directions. Odd numbers read as deliberate, not symmetrical filler.
So nothing floats by accident. Every element earns its position on the page.
So the important thing actually wins. The headline reads first. The CTA reads next.
So a brand feels like one brand across touchpoints. Type, colour, and rhythm carry through every asset.
So the reader knows where to look first and where to land next. Nothing gets equal weight by default.
Because cramped design loses trust fast. We hold space deliberately, and we apply the 70/20/10 ratio for colour to keep the work calibrated.
These rules also shape every mark we build on our custom logo design projects.
Working With a Calgary Designer
vs. an Agency
Start calling around Calgary for design help and you'll notice two very different conversations. Shops like GrowME, Kobzza, and Full Blast pitch design as one tile in a larger marketing grid, sitting next to SEO retainers, ad spend, and dev hours. That model works for some businesses. It also means your brand work competes for attention inside a roadmap built around media buys.
Working with a dedicated Calgary graphic designer is a different setup. You talk to the person doing the work. No account manager relay. No Monday status call to translate feedback into a ticket. If a headline needs to shift or a layout needs another round, that's a Slack message, not a change order routed through three inboxes.
Full source files on delivery. AI, INDD, Figma, whatever the format. You own them outright β the same standard we hold on our custom logo work.
Direct designer access for revisions and questions during the engagement. No middle layer.
Flat project pricing quoted up front, not hourly drift. You know the number before we start.
For most small and mid-sized Calgary businesses, that's the math that actually pencils out. If you want a flat-fee number against your specific scope, get a quote and skip the discovery-call dance.
Our Sunridge Studio
and Service Area
Our studio sits a few minutes from Sunridge Shopping Centre, which puts us in the middle of the NE corridor and well-positioned for the businesses we work with most. The Sunridge stretch has become a real hub for independent retailers, family-run restaurants, and service brands that need design work done by someone who actually knows the neighbourhood. We built the studio here on purpose.
If you're closer to Marlborough Mall or working out of an office near the Village Square Leisure Centre, we're happy to meet in person. A 20-minute coffee usually saves a week of back-and-forth on brand direction, packaging proofs, or campaign layouts. Most NE clients prefer that first kickoff face to face. The rest moves to email and shared files.
We do a lot of work for retailers and food brands operating out of CrossIron Mills and along the Deerfoot corridor, plus product companies warehousing in Balzac and Stoney Industrial. That mix shapes how we design. Signage that reads from a parking lot. Packaging that survives a cold chain. Menu systems that scale from one location to four. Practical stuff.
For clients in the SW, Airdrie, Okotoks, or anywhere else in Alberta, we run projects remotely without losing momentum. Video calls, a shared Figma or Dropbox, and clear weekly check-ins. Distance hasn't been a problem for years.
Starting a project
Send a short email with the basics. We'll come back with a real quote, not a placeholder range. Helpful things to include in that first message:
What you need. Full brand identity, packaging, a one-off flyer, web graphics β the more specific, the faster the quote.
Your deadline. Or the event driving it. Trade show, launch date, board meeting.
Existing brand assets. Files you want us to work with or replace.
A budget range. Even a rough one. It helps us scope to the right level instead of guessing.
If a logo is the piece you're missing, start on our custom logo design page instead. Otherwise, send the brief and we'll book a call within a business day.
Graphic Design
Questions
Stop Talking About Design.
Start Scoping Yours.
If you've got a brochure, a deck, a packaging run, or a full brand system that needs to ship this quarter, this is the part where we stop talking about design and start scoping yours. Send the brief, give us a deadline, and we'll come back inside one business day with a flat-fee quote, a timeline, and the name of the designer who'll actually do the work.