Graphic Designer Greater

Add Design – The Online Graphic Designers

Add Design are the online graphic designers, offering outstanding graphic design for businesses across the UK including companies in Salford Greater Manchester.

Add Design offer exceptional graphic design and printing at accessible prices. Our range of fixed priced products allow you to do so much more with your marketing budget. Providing a real alternative to run-off-the-mill printers and over-priced design agencies.

From business stationery, to flyers, brochures and beyond, all our work is conducted with one aim in mind – to help you generate the best response. This means more than just creating a good looking design. It means creating an eye-catching, smartly laid-out and well worded design which hits the right customers with the right message.

This is why so many UK businesses, from small start-ups to large national companies, trust us to produce their marketing material.

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So why choose Add Design to design and deliver your marketing material.

Here are 8 simple reasons why Add Design are the choice for successful companies across the UK including , Greater Manchester.

1. AFFORDABLE – Fixed prices which include all design work, high quality print and UK-wide delivery. No spiralling design or print costs.
2. EFFICIENT – Draft designs delivered directly to your inbox for amendments/approval.
3. STRAIGHT-FORWARD – Easy to understand design and print process.
4. TALENTED – Eye-catching designs from qualified graphic designers.
5. SUCCESSFUL – Our unique design process starts with a detailed design brief and makes sure we hit your marketing aims.
6. ONE STOP SHOP – We do everything from logo design to websites, making sure your branding is always strong and always consistent.
7. EASY TO CONTACT – Your own dedicated account handler is always at the end of the phone.
8. TRUSTED – We have delivered outstanding design and print work for businesses, councils and charities across the UK and beyond.

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More Information About Greater

With increased competition from the towns of Bolton and Oldham, ’s cotton spinning industries faltered, and so its economy turned increasingly to other textiles and to the finishing trades, including rexine and silk dyeing, and fulling and bleaching, at a string of works in .  For centuries in , textiles and related trades were the main source of employment.

Both Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels spent time in , studying the plight of the British working class.   In The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844, Engels described as “really one large working-class quarter …[a] very unhealthy, dirty and dilapidated district which, while other industries were almost always textile related is situated opposite the ‘Old Church’ of Manchester”.

developed several civic institutions; in 1806, Chapel Street became the first street in the world to be lit by gas (supplied by Phillips and Lee’s cotton mill).  In 1850, under the terms of the Museums Act 1845, the municipal borough council established the The Royal Museum & Public Library, said to have been the first unconditional free public library in England, preceding the Public Libraries Act 1850.

The effect on of the Industrial Revolution has been described as “phenomenal”.  The area expanded from a small market town into a major industrial metropolis; factories replaced cottage industries, and the population of rose from 12,000 in 1812 to 70,244 within 30 years.   By the end of the 19th century it had increased to 220,000.  Large-scale building of low quality Victorian terraced housing did not stop overcrowding, which itself lead to chronic social deprivation.  The density of housing was as high as 80 homes per acre.

Graphic Designer Greater

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Category: Greater Manchester  | Tags: ,
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