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Structured visual systems for modern brands and technical environments.

DomDesign is the studio of Dominic Daniel — a graphic designer working at the intersection of precision, craft, and real production thinking. Based in Québec, Canada.

Production-floor trained · Branding · Editorial · Technical design

Based in
Québec, Canada
Disciplines
Branding · Editorial · Technical
Status
Open to freelance
Studio
DomDesign
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About

My path into graphic design did not follow a straight line. It was built through years of hands-on work in the print and production industry — before I ever sat down at a designer's desk.

I came up through production. At Imprimerie Paragraph, I worked as a project manager — coordinating jobs, handling files, and learning how design survives ink, paper, registration, and the unforgiving reality of the press. That foundation reshaped how I think about every layout I touch today.

At PMU Québec, I now produce evacuation plans — technical drawings where every line, label, and legend has to carry meaning under pressure. Precision is not a stylistic preference there; it's a requirement. That discipline carries directly into my branding, editorial, and identity work.

I trained formally through three complementary programs: a DEP in Graphic Design at CBG Sorel-Tracy, a DEC in Project Management & Graphic Communication at Ahuntsic College, and an AEC in Graphic & Web Design at John Abbott College. Each one added a different layer — craft, process, then the digital and strategic dimension.

Today I work as a graphic designer, take on freelance projects on the side, and continue building a body of work rooted in real production thinking. I'd rather make work that holds up on press than work that only photographs well on a feed.

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Experience & Education

Professional

  1. 2022 — Present

    Evacuation Plan Technician / Graphic Designer

    PMU Québec

    Production of technical evacuation plans — drafting, symbol systems, plan layouts, and graphic output for printed safety signage in collaboration with fire safety and project teams.

  2. 2019 — 2022

    Graphic Designer

    Production JG

    Design and pre-press for production-oriented print work. File preparation, layout systems, and on-brand visual output.

  3. 2019

    Project Manager

    Imprimerie Paragraph

    Coordination of print projects from intake to delivery. Hands-on involvement with paper, ink, registration, and press realities — the foundation of my design instinct.

  4. 2018 — 2019

    Print Industry

    Various roles

    Production-floor experience across the print industry — where design either works or it doesn't.

Education

  1. 2023 — 2024

    Graphic & Web Design AEC

    John Abbott College

    Digital methods, web fundamentals, and contemporary visual communication.

  2. 2020 — 2023

    Project Management & Graphic Communication DEC

    Ahuntsic College

    Strategy, production workflow, and the management side of design — how projects actually get made.

  3. 2016 — 2018

    Graphic Design DEP

    CBG Sorel-Tracy

    Foundational training in design craft, typography, and the discipline of layout.

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Selected work

A working archive of design work, technical layouts, academic projects, and freelance concepts. Some projects shipped, some were not selected — all of them shaped how I think, build, and communicate visually.

Case 01

School design projects

A body of academic work produced during my DEP, DEC, and AEC programs — typographic studies, editorial layouts, identity exercises, and structured grid work.

Focus
Typography, grid, hierarchy
Tools
InDesign, Illustrator, Photoshop
Period
2022–2024
Case 02

Branding & logo systems

Identity work — wordmarks, monograms, and the systems around them. My approach starts with the typographic structure and works outward toward color, signage, and application.

Focus
Wordmark, monogram, system
Tools
Illustrator, InDesign
Output
Print & digital applications
Case 03

PMU Québec — Technical evacuation plans

Ongoing technical design work: floor-plan drafting, evacuation routes, symbol systems, and code-compliant signage layouts. Every plan is a working document — it has to be legible under stress, in poor lighting, and across different print sizes.

Discipline
Technical drafting · Signage
Tools
AutoCAD, Illustrator
Constraints
Code compliance, legibility, durability
Case 04

Print & layout

Production-grade print files: brochures, posters, business stationery. Built with the press in mind — bleeds, color profiles, registration, and the discipline of files that run cleanly the first time.

Focus
Pre-press & production
Tools
InDesign, Illustrator, Acrobat
Output
Offset & digital print
Case 05

Freelance client concepts

Independent client work outside my employer. Small businesses, local services, identity refreshes. The scope is modest by design — the goal is to ship work that actually gets used.

Scope
Small business identity & print
Engagement
Direct-to-client
Status
Selectively taking new work
Case 06 · Honest

Unselected concepts & lost pitches

Not every project ships. These are real concepts that clients did not select, presented honestly — because the reasoning behind a "no" usually teaches more than a "yes."

A. Restaurant identity — concept not selected

Client need. A small restaurant looking for a complete visual identity with a modern but warm character.

Concept direction. A refined typographic logotype paired with a custom monogram and a muted earth-tone palette.

What worked. The typographic system was strong and the print applications held together cleanly.

Why it was not selected. The client chose a more illustrative, character-driven proposal. They wanted personality on the page; I delivered structure.

What I learned. A correct answer is not always the chosen one. What a client emotionally responds to matters as much as the underlying design logic.

How it improved my process. I now lead with mood boards and visual references earlier in the conversation — before the typography starts moving.

B. Nonprofit rebrand pitch — not awarded

Client need. A small nonprofit wanted to refresh a dated identity while keeping existing supporters comfortable.

Concept direction. A clean restructuring of the existing mark — same shape, modernized proportions, refined color.

What worked. Continuity. Donors would have recognized the brand instantly, and the system was production-ready.

Why it was not selected. The board wanted a bolder break from the past. They felt the proposal was too quiet for the moment.

What I learned. "Refresh" can mean very different things. Some clients want evolution, others want a flag in the ground.

How it improved my process. I now ask explicitly how far the client is willing to move from where they are.

C. Local service brand — direction changed mid-project

Client need. A local service provider needed a full identity and basic print package on a tight timeline.

Concept direction. A geometric monogram with a strict sans-serif system, focused on legibility on vehicles and signage.

What worked. The mark performed well at small sizes and in single-color print.

Why it was not selected. The client pivoted their offering halfway through. The original brief no longer matched the new business model.

What I learned. A brief is a snapshot of a moment. Building flexibility into the system from the start is more valuable than perfecting the first idea.

How it improved my process. I now design identity systems with at least one secondary configuration in mind — so the brand can flex without being rebuilt.

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Skills

Design

  • Branding & visual identity
  • Editorial & layout systems
  • Typography
  • Hierarchy & grid

Technical

  • Evacuation plans
  • AutoCAD layouts
  • Production-ready files
  • Pre-press & print specifications

Web

  • HTML & CSS
  • Visual Studio Code
  • GitHub & GitHub Pages
  • Responsive design

Software

  • Adobe Illustrator
  • Adobe Photoshop
  • Adobe InDesign
  • AutoCAD
  • DaVinci Resolve
  • Microsoft 365
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Contact

If you're looking for design that holds up in production — reach out.

digidesign73@gmail.com