12.09.09
Swiss experimental design/illustration lab Happypets has been busy updating with all kinds of interesting creations, from tees, to posters, to tats.
Swiss experimental design/illustration lab Happypets has been busy updating with all kinds of interesting creations, from tees, to posters, to tats.
Wear It With Pride has a new project entitled ‘Originals By Artists’ featuring just that. You can purchase the originals via the WIWP online store. There is some really nice work in there from some notable illustrators and designers. I am not sure if the above painting by artist Tadaomi Shibuya is included in the ‘Originals By Artists’ series but it was one of my favorites nonetheless. Someone else must have liked it as it has already been sold.
Helsinki-based freelancing illustrator and graphic designer Janine Rewell sent an email to let us know she updated her portfolio with some tasty new work.
Just when I have finally swore off buying any more t-shirts I stumble across the storefront of Freegums and discover an awesome cache of simple, smart and damn-good-looking tees.
Illustrator Kervin Brisseaux has been busy updating with some really kinetic and colorful imagery. Call it electro-dimensional if you will.
Savannah College of Art and Design graduate Sam Wolfe Connelly is creating some very nice illustration work combining original charcoal drawings with a digital finish.
Italian Illustrator/designer and founder of RevolverLover and ANTI magazine, Nazario Graziano has been busy updating his portfolio with some of his signature retro-inspired collage work.
Designer and illustrator David Mascha sent in a link to his portfolio tonight. He has updated with both a new website and new work. The website is about as smooth and no frills as a Flash site can get. It’s function first, showcasing his unique digital illustration work with a modern contemporary flair that really sets off his style. His illustration work is a lot of fun to look at but he also has some nice typography work happening in his portfolio that serves as an extra bonus. Good work.
Brazilian graphic artist Adhemas Batista has been very busy cranking out the bright, colorful and slick vector illustration work that made him known throughout the design world. He has collected his most recent efforts to display in an equally slick new website. He has also launched a blog if you want to keep up with him there.
Illustration and design representation agency Colagene has a unique roster of talent generating some beautiful examples of design, illustration and typography work just waiting to inspire.
I can’t say I am crazy about Sterling Hundley’s website but his imaginatively beautiful drawing and illustration work more than makes up for any technical shortcomings. Just try spending a little time staring at the image above.
I have written about Brazilian artist Douglas Bicicleta before but a recent visit to his Flickr-folio yielded a discovery of some stunning new work. The album cover above for Black Drawing Chalks’ Life Is A Big Holiday For Us is a particular standout.
Designer Joel Evey has updated again with a few new examples of his minimal and considered work. He is definitely drawing a bridge between art and design.
Pandayoghurt has updated with some new and fresh work.
“Chris Silas Neal is an illustrator and designer, born in Texas and raised in Florida and Colorado. His work has been published by a variety of magazines and book publishers and, has been recognized by Communicatin Arts, American Illustration, AIGA, Society of Illustrators, Society of Publication Designers, Art Directors Club of Denver, Print Magazine and Society of News Designers. He exhibits drawings at various galleries across the country. He currently works and lives in Brooklyn and teaches Illustration at Pratt Institute.”
German designer Simon Becker has an enormous portfolio of work, and there are some gems within to be mined through a little browsing.
Since I last dropped in illustrator/artist Martine Johanna has been busy updating her portfolio lately with both new drawings and works on canvas.
Although it appears that Alex Cherry’s illustrations are created digitally, they maintain a tactile quality making them feel more like art than digital imaging. It could be that he is drawing and painting first, then scanning his hand-crafted work to complete digitally. Unfortunately, it doesn’t really say much of anything about him or how he operates on his website.