Archive for the ‘Art’ Category
Ballard Art Walk
ENTRY DATE: Thursday, July 15th, 2010

The Three Little Pigs. Two-sided art. Can you guess what's on the back?

Godzilla Lose Ice Cream

Hanging the show.
Last Saturday I had the pleasure of showing off some art during the Ballard Art Walk. The good folks at Stoke Strategy hosted the event, and have generously provided their presentation wall as a temporary gallery for the next few weeks. If you’re in the neighborhood, stop by and check it out.
Bicycle Girl Illustration
ENTRY DATE: Friday, December 4th, 2009
Here’s an example of an illustration style I’m trying on. I drew the outlines with one No. 2 pencil and many sheets of tracing and layout paper. To get the detail in the face and bicycle parts I worked large, breaking the drawing into parts. I then scanned the parts in, reassembled them in Photoshop and brought in a few textures from a texture library I’ve been building over time. After I added the color blocks, I spent a good while tweaking the color palette and finessing the layer transparencies.
Color-wise, this could easily have been a springtime or fall scene (or a winter one if not for the flowers and sundress) but I ended going with a warm, golden, end-of-summer look. Which is nice to reminisce about when the frost on our deck is barely melting during the day.
The Joy of Hand-rendered Vector Art
ENTRY DATE: Thursday, October 15th, 2009
One of the beefs I have with a lot of vector art is that it often looks like, well, vector art. Too “computer-y”. In the right hands, the gradients and other flashy tools provided by programs like Adobe Illustrator can be used to great effect, especially for information graphics. But these tools also make it easy to create overly decorated work that lacks the warmth of a hand-rendered illustration.
Fortunately, Illustrator also provides tools that help you turn your napkin sketch into vector art without digitizing the life out of it. I sketched this spot illustration with a marker brush, creating large-stroke drawing for the bird plus a batch of pencil outlines for the color blocks. I then scanned the pieces and outlined them with Illustrator’s Live Trace tool, using different settings for the thick brush strokes versus the thin color outlines.
After combining the resulting vector outlines, I was able to play with color until I developed a palette I liked. To me this is one of the major benefits of vector art. I can explore and change color quickly, testing ideas and keeping multiple copies of variations I can go back to later. And if a client needs a change, I can work more quickly and efficiently with a vector file, without having to go back to the napkin.

A cleaned-up version of the brush drawing.

Final spot illustration.

Outlines for the color blocks.
The Submarines Poster
ENTRY DATE: Monday, August 17th, 2009
A few months back I was among the lucky designers invited to create a poster for an artist playing at the 2009 Sasquatch! Music Festival. Through a controlled lottery I ended up with The Submarines, an indie-pop group with female vocalist and a lighthearted, sunshiny sound. Because this was a labor of love (read: no compensation) and I was paying for the printing, I pretty much had total creative control. Which was somewhat intimidating at first, but I’m really happy with the result.
Although the show organizer requested only 12 posters from each designer, I printed a total of fifty, with a few extras thrown in by the printer. The remaining posters are now for sale at gigposters.com.



