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HPMD* Tshirt
new release today:D
This is HPMD's first try of rigged mesh clothes!
I hope you'll like them.
Please try free DEMOs before purchase.
The three posts of today are of logos found on T-shirts that were hidden far in the back of my closet. Part of my downsizing effort is to throw out things I will never use or wear again. While the T-shirts are tattered, stained, and a size too small now, their logos and the memories connected with them will live on in my digital files.
As Jerry Garcia once said. "What a long, strange trip it's been". I have mostly enjoyed, grown with, and survived the trip to date. Looking forward towards the next turn in the bend-big move happens this coming Monday.
A selection of t-shirts designed by me (excluding the rhinestone bear) and made by Prime Print! All for sale now!
primecub.com/primeprint/index.php/shop/tshirts
International shipping and a variety of colours available.
A new tshirt I designed for No Guts No Glory has been released.
You can buy it here: www.ngngdesign.com/
I would prefer that you bought a t-shirt, rather than make a comment..!!!!! ;P
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BUY HERE:
As some of you know, I've been churning out a few t-shirt designs which I've made for sale on RedBubble. This is actually the design I started first, but due to the amount of work involved, I set it aside to focus on simpler designs.
I love photography (no surprise there), but when it comes to t-shirt designs, a photo is just not a very good option. You can't get clear and sharp edges and in most cases you want to use an image with a lot more contrast to it.
It's Not My Fault has been one of my most popular photos, and so I thought it might make a good shirt design—but only if converted to vector artwork. The first part of this process is bringing the photo into the vector app and essentially tracing the contours of the figures in the original photo. (As any vector artist will tell you, this is nowhere near as easy as it sounds!) The next step is to lay down the color and apply shading. I opted for flat shadowing to enhance contrast, as you can see.
If you're playing spot the difference, you'll no doubt notice that I've made a number of changes in the conversion to illustration. I didn't want the troopers to look like action figures, so I took out all of the obvious visual cues that they are toys. The left trooper's hands are the most obvious change, I think; I just felt he needs to have a more natural, expressive pose.
The blue in the bottom illustration represents the color of the blue shirt available from RedBubble. It's darker than the original sky, of course, but the troopers really pop out from the background now.
Anyway, hope you like it!
model: hadeel.
photography: sup3ryummy
www.flickr.com/photos/sup3ryummy/
the product : K.OS
illustrated by : noor abdallah
btw guys you're supposed to comment on the Tshirt. not on the model * and its not a self portrait ;)*that still doesnt mean you cant give credit to the model
Looking down the front walkway towards the Spin Street entrance down in the distance, from the right edge of Petco, which comprises the western section of the former Lowenstein's space.
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Spin Street (closing Jan. 2018), 1948-49 built (as Lowenstein's Department Store), Poplar Ave. at Highland St., Memphis
A selection of t-shirts designed by me (excluding the rhinestone bear) and made by Prime Print! All for sale now!
primecub.com/primeprint/index.php/shop/tshirts
International shipping and a variety of colours available.
RevDanCatt posing in the Flickr tshirt. Sunset and beach sold separately.
Original photo by Kelly Jensen at Photojojo.
Sunset background by René Ehrhardt.