Digital UK Design Blog

Barrrrrmy times!

February 9, 2009 | Frankenstein's Lab, Fun, Graphic Design | Gary Hartley | 2 Comments »

My agency 9xb recently moved premises and required a full refit. Part of the existing setup was a rather blank white wall with a red fire alarm top center of it. This area was to be the reception wall that clients and guests would see when entering the building so we decided to go crazy and generate some artwork to fill the space and brighten the room up. The simplest thing to do would be to paint it, but we’re not like that here, we don’t mind taking risks and thinking outside the box.

Before the refit started we took a couple of shots of the wall from different angles and mocked up a few ideas.

Initial visuals

Options whittled down

Option 1: Millions of sheep

Wall option 1

An illustration of hundreds of sheep with one cheeky-chappy chilling out.

Option 1: Millions of sheep – closeup

Wall option1 closeup

Option 2: Crazy phychodelic sheep

Wall option 2

Seriously bright, seriously mental.

And the winner is…

The crazy phychodelic sheep of course!

Another angle mocked up

Mockup winner

The final file ended up being 1.4gb in size, measuring 3.5m by 2.2m. Sheep image from istockphoto, printed out and an industrial high res scan created, merging a phychodelic rainbow as a Photoshop Smart-Object then sent to printers who came a week later to fix it to the wall. I’ll get a real photo uploaded asap.

Previous digital art for 9xb

View 9xb digital art post here

Following on from the 9xb digital staff portraits, new starter Gyles Seward has had his very own created. After suffering hours of digital torcher in Frog’s special Frankenstein-esk Lab this hideous creation appeared.

Gyles Seward at 9xb

See this in action on the 9xb site.

Digital art staff portraits for 9xb, which collectively took circa 60 hours to complete.

View my Flickr 9xb page for full size versions.

Photoshop digital art experiments

Traditional

A diptych (pronounced “dip-tick”) is any object with two flat plates attached at a hinge. Devices of this form were quite popular in the ancient world, types existing for recording notes and for measuring time and direction. The term is also used figuratively for a thematically-linked sequence of two books.

Modern

In modern digital art and photography a diptych is used to describe two images that are stuck together. A Triptych is very similar, instead of 2 faces, it has three.

Examples

Credit: Nick Andika (Flickr)

Diptych

Credit: Panda Cat Baby (Flickr)

Credit: Frida Fritteuse (Flickr)

Credit: Victoria K (Flickr)

Credit: powJana (Flickr)

Potential scenarios

  • Past & Present
  • Old & New
  • Night & Day
  • Hot & Cold
  • Dry & Wet
  • Far & Near
  • Front & Back
  • Comparisons

Inspiration

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