(top to bottom) Yes for SeaTac campaign home page,
and a Guardian article about the importance of the campaign victory
and a Guardian article about the importance of the campaign victory
SeaTac and the campaign for a $15 per hour minimum wage
In 2013 I was hired to design a site for an initiative in SeaTac, Washington to raise the town’s minimum wage to $15 per hour. I designed and developed the campaign site for the campaign Yes for SeaTac. When the project started, it had a logo and name, but no other design. In my role as visual designer, I created an overall look from the existing logo and designed the site around that. I worked as the sole developer of the site and my work enabled the content team and the campaign to focus on getting out their message.
In November 2013, Proposition 1 passed. SeaTac became the first city in the United States to mandate a $15-per-hour minimum wage.
This site is no longer live, but an archived version of Yes for SeaTac is here.
Read The Guardian’s article about the campaign victory’s importance.
In 2013 I was hired to design a site for an initiative in SeaTac, Washington to raise the town’s minimum wage to $15 per hour. I designed and developed the campaign site for the campaign Yes for SeaTac. When the project started, it had a logo and name, but no other design. In my role as visual designer, I created an overall look from the existing logo and designed the site around that. I worked as the sole developer of the site and my work enabled the content team and the campaign to focus on getting out their message.
In November 2013, Proposition 1 passed. SeaTac became the first city in the United States to mandate a $15-per-hour minimum wage.
This site is no longer live, but an archived version of Yes for SeaTac is here.
Read The Guardian’s article about the campaign victory’s importance.
Yes for SeaTac mobile Home page, Action buttons, and Get the Facts page
Yes for SeaTac desktop Get the Facts page
© 2019 Daniel Lievens