Monday, April 11, 2011

Bulletproof Love

It's a band of a friend of mine.
We sat down and decided to make some visuals to go along with the music. Something you would see and immediately relate it to the band.

So at first we decided to design a t-shirt for the band. A common enough way to bring attention to a band. So here are the pieces we made to create a shirt that would look good and be simple enough for the average person to be able to understand.


A less that clever way to portray the band's name.



A big piece of the t-shirt design, the bullet casing with the heart of smoke coming from it.


Main logo:


And here is the final shirt design we ended with...

Band art.


Band art.



Sunday, March 20, 2011

Wrangler is Back . More Painted Shoes

So here's my TJ back on the road.  About 4 months ago, I slid it into a tree while 4x4ing and I messed up most of whats under the front end. Headlights went out as well.  Then not too much later, I got it stuck in a park, where it shouldn't have been in the first place.  The car got impounded, and had gotten flats and some other minor damages. The worst though: Having pumpkins slowly rot in your back seat for 2 months...

So over the past few weeks, me and my dad have been fixing it back up.  It ended up costing more than it should have due to the need to keep buying newer and better tools to get the job done.

-I spent $600 on new tires.  33x12.50's
-Next was a lift kit. I got a 4" Skyjacker lift for $500.  We needed this to replace my front and rear lower control arms that I bent up pretty well, and we needed to be able to fit the 33's under the Jeep too.
-Next was reinforced axle mounting brackets. I also bent these up past fixing. To put these on, we got a $1000 wire-fed welder.
-$40 on a pair of new headlights, after  taking apart the entire dash around the steering column to figure out what the problem wasn't.
-$400 for an impact wrench to take of some bad lugs.

We had to buy other various tools and bolts and replacements throughout the process, accounting for even more money.  But in 4 weeks, roughly 30 hours of work, we went from a stock Jeep, to a lifted Jeep that can drive over a stock Jeep.

Here's what we ended up with...


Some different angles, before and after shots...


And apart from fixing my TJ, I've also been focusing on making more custom shoes.  These ones here were for a friend of mine. She wanted a water theme like my pair.
I roughly sketched the design out in pencil first, then went straight to paint. This pair took about 5 hours of painting.
The colors didn't turn out how I imagined.  They are too similar to one another for the design to really pop. I want to redo this pair, with more detail and a better color scheme.
Also I need to try a different type of paint. The dollar-a-bottle fabric paint I am using now really isn't working so well I've noticed.  Acrylics are my next shot!


Sunday, February 6, 2011

Daily Tablet Practice

Day One
45 minutes on my first painting with the tablet. Just getting used to the tablet and working with a pen instead of a mouse.


Day Two
More practice with light and shadows.
I tried to work with white and black as much as possible on this one while still keeping some color in the picture. Could use some practice on textures as well...



Day Three
I'm trying to work with light as much as I can in these daily paintings.
This one started off as a quick speed paint, but once I got to the lighting, I ended up needing as much time as I could get.


Speed painting. I stopped at 35 minutes. This one was great practice on perspective. Creating it at first took me some time. I guess I just have trouble getting the perspective I have in mind on to the canvas.


Day Four
Playing with light, shadows and perspective. The three things I need the most practice with. I found drawing the light source and the surface's direction to be very helpful with all parts.