EPISODE DESCRIPTIONIn this episode of CAPTN OffScript, I sit down with Kieron Anthony Lewis, an editorial designer, speaker, educator, and Adobe Live host whose work sits at the intersection of culture, community, and meaning. This is a deeply personal conversation about creative identity, purpose, loss, and what it means to design work that actually matters.Kieron shares the story behind one of the most monumental projects of his career - a 456-page hardback publication celebrating 161 artists from Lagos, Nigeria, housed in a custom concrete case. What began as a “coffee table book” evolved into a multi-year cultural document tied to Nigeria’s 65th Independence Anniversary. We talk about the emotional weight of designing such a project remotely from London, the fear of first seeing the physical object in Lagos, and what it means to design for a place and a community you deeply respect.  We trace Kieron’s creative roots back to childhood - cutting up magazines, obsessing over comics, and unknowingly falling in love with grids, typography, and editorial structure long before he knew graphic design was a career. He opens up about struggling in traditional advertising environments, being a person of color in large agencies, and how side projects, voluntary work, and community involvement kept him creatively alive during difficult periods.  Kieron explains how going freelance during COVID became a defining turning point. Within the same week, he handed in his notice, secured major publishing work with HarperCollins, planned a wedding, and received an unexpected email from Adobe inviting him to join Adobe Live. What followed was a snowball of opportunities - hosting live streams, teaching globally, speaking at universities, and becoming a trusted voice in editorial and cultural design.  The conversation goes deeper into life beyond work. Kieron speaks candidly about becoming a father, how his priorities shifted, and why he no longer defines himself purely through productivity. He reflects on grief and loss, sharing the story of being named one of the “25 for 2025 Design for Planet Trailblazers” on the same day his grandfather passed away. That moment reshaped how he views success, ambition, and legacy.  We talk about humility, calmness, pride in craft, and the values passed down through generations. Kieron shares lessons from his grandfather about speaking with intention, respecting all forms of work, and finding dignity in what you do. These values now guide how he designs, teaches, parents, and shows up in the world.  This episode is not just about design. It is about belonging, perspective, community, and learning when to slow down. If you care about editorial design, cultural work, creative identity, or simply becoming a more grounded human through your work, this conversation will stay with you.
🔗 Website: kieronlewis.com🔗 Instagram: @kieronanthonyl🔗 LinkedIn: kieronlewis












