Showing posts with label huntington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label huntington. Show all posts

Hard Times, Awakening The Revenant, Let The Guilty Hang, Nation, Bad Terms, Ancient Shores, Last Level, Station(s), and Last Days Of Sun show poster.

After it was scanned into Photoshop, I colored it and added text.

Inked in and ready to scan.

Still in the process of drawing it by pencil.

Nation buttons


The black, red, and white button was completely done in Photoshop while the "banner" button was hand drawn, inked in (seen below), and then scanned into Photoshop for coloring.

Original drawing in pencil at the beginning of the inking process.

Malicious Intent (WV) t-shirt


The final design, printed.  I wasn't as excited about the font choice but it was exactly what they wanted, so we went with it.  

This is a close-up of the beginning of the inking process.  I drew out the rough design in pencil, inked it in, the scanned it into Photoshop for the addition of the band name.

Nothing lasts forever


This is the exact layout I had in mind for this flyer all along.  The bird was drawn in pencil, inked, then painted with watercolors.  The layout was done in Photoshop.


The drawing on the left is the original drawing.  I didn't want to paint on it, just in case I wasn't happy with the job I did, nor would that paper be good for watercolors.  I scanned it and printed it on better paper, made one version that looked terrible, then did another that you see here on the right.  

Static-X, Prong, Davey Suicide, 9Electric, Linework, Nation, Ejaculation Of Serpents show poster

11x17 poster for Static-X, Prong, Davey Suicide, 9Electric, etc., in Huntington, WV.  All the text and Wayne Static himself were drawn by hand, then scanned into Photoshop.  Things were moved a bit, I removed his body (I was never happy with it) and then added the background image.

 Final drawing and band name text before scanning them into the computer.

The beginnings of the drawing.

Death Comes Ripping, Part II

This started as a mash-up I made for my Facebook page and it turned into a much bigger thing.  T-shirts, buttons, stickers and posters were made.  A lot of people bought them and here are a few pictures of all of it.


Buttons.

The t-shirt, button, sticker, poster pre-orders - ready to be packed up.

Thanks to Billie for buying 10 of these then taking this amazing picture of her family wearing them.

Lauren loving WV on the beach in Florida.

The one and only Misfits of West Virginia shirt on grey.  xoxo to Rachel.


Leno lookin' good in DC.

Alese, driving the streets...


Crissy in VA loving her strange cousins from the West.


Dead center on Don's guitar case.

"No cannibal bath salt astro zombie tolerated in WV." - Jake.



Matt at work.

Mike makes the stickers then applies them @Brand Yourself.


Happy Father's Day Brent!

The Walking Ben.

Thomas stands alone.

Jewel City Rollergirls roller skate sticker

  

3" sticker design for the Jewel City Rollergirls


I created a ring that was the exact size of the ring on the original wheel, cleaned out all the original text, then altered it to reflect the Jewel City team colors.  After that, I simply added the text and jewels.

I removed the bottom wheel, duplicated one side of the top wheel to give it a bottom, then took the girls out.

 The original photo.

Jewel City Rollergirls "Long Live The Jewel City" t-shirt

Straight to the point.  Big print on the front of a tshirt.  I'll have pictures of the actual shirts very soon.

Jewel City Rollergirls unused skull and crossbones

This flyer was made for the Jewel City Rollergirls but it wasn't used because the old coach didn't like the use of skulls.  I was really happy with the way the skull and "crossbones" turned out but not thrilled with the flyer.  It technically wasn't finished since I got the word that it wasn't going to be used.  I drew the skull and crossbones by hand, scanned them into Photoshop and did everything else there.

This is the skull sketch when it was just about finished.

Jumping hurdles

Here's the finished product.  Do you want to know how I got to this this?  Let's go on a little trip...

First, I saved this picture of them I found online.  Thanks, Erin Caruso.

Next, I cut all the background out of the picture then added the headstock to his guitar and the right side of his right shoe to the image.  I also used a halftone effect on this part of the flyer (not shown here - only in finished product above).

After that, I simply drew some lines with a Sharpie and scanned it into Photoshop.

Lastly, I painted a piece of paper with acrylic paint and scanned it into Photoshop.

After it was all said and done, I pieced it all together and came up with the final version that you see at the top of this post.  TA-DA!

Lloyd loves Diane

This was the first version of this flyer.  I wanted to make a mock of the classic '80's movie "Say Anything" poster.  The guy with the boom box and the boom box(es) were hand-drawn and scanned into Photoshop where the rest of the work was done.  Notice that he's holding the Decepticon Transformer, Shockwave.

Since I made one with Shockwave, I thought I should make one with his Autobot nemesis, Blaster.  Since this one was for the "good guys," I found it appropriate to lighten up the guy's t-shirt too.

This is what the original DVD cover for "Say Anything" looks like.

At least the scenery was nice

I found this image on the internet, made all the mountains even in the background, then added more sky.  It wasn't much work, but I love the way it looks.

Thank you, Mr. Cosell

This one was done in a hurry but I really liked the way it turned out.  Everything was done in Photoshop.

The end of an era

This was my first shot at drawing something by hand, scanning it into Photoshop, then coloring and additional elements to the drawing in Photoshop.  It honestly turned out exactly the way I wanted it to.

This was another drawing I did for this show.  We had 3 different 11x17 posters for sale in a set at the show.  They were limited to 150 sets.  The girl was drawn by hand, scanned into Photoshop, and the rest was done in Photoshop.  The Holden Caulfield logo at the top was created by Mark Bogacki.  

I wish I could go back and do the arm on this poster different.  The grass and arm were both from photographs and the zombies in the background were hand drawn then scanned into Photoshop.  I created this Holden Caulfield logo - it will be featured in a different blog post later.


This is the original drawing for the first poster.