

In-House Design at Scatter Press
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Creative design that tells your story
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At Scatter Press, our in-house design team transforms ideas into striking, meaningful visuals. Whether you’re an author, educator, or organisation, we help you define your visual identity — from your logo to your full brand presence.
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We understand that great design isn’t just about looking good. It’s about clarity, purpose, and emotional connection. Every colour, layout, and font choice supports your message and audience.
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What We Do:​​​
Digital & marketing design
Social media visuals and launch campaigns
Author or business website design
Digital marketing materials and press kits
Visuals for online courses, events, or educational resources

Book & publication design
Bespoke cover design
Interior layout and typesetting
Illustrated elements and icons
Accessibility-first layouts for neurodiverse and visually diverse readers
Series branding for multi-title authors or school publications

Branding & identity
Brand concept development
Logo design and brand marks;
Colour palettes and typography systems
Brand guidelines and tone of voice creation
Visual identity for educational and community projects

Why Work With Our Design Team?​
Our designers work hand-in-hand with editors and publishers to ensure consistency across every detail, from the look of your book to the tone of your brand.
We don’t outsource or use templates.
Everything is crafted in-house, ensuring originality, coherence, and quality control at every stage.​Inclusive. Thoughtful. Distinctly you.That’s the Scatter Press design standard.​​
The Scatter Press Design Studio
Take a look at what is happening in Scatter Press design studio...
We are currently working on the layout and illustrations for our flagship book, 100 Years of Pooh. The illustrations, by R. Rosa, are drawn from quiet moments in her own daughter’s early years, and reflect the richness, complexity, and quiet importance of a child’s inner world. A hundred years may have passed since Winnie the Pooh first appeared, but the landscape of childhood has changed very little. Children still create small worlds of great importance, still think slowly and seriously about simple things, and still live in a space where imagination and reality sit comfortably beside one another. The drawings in this book are small records of that world, which, in many ways, remains unchanged across generations.
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