What's new

Graphic Artists help wanted. Free print out of it if you help.

Just got the file. Perfect. Thank you very much. Now I can drop it into some of the stuff I already did tonight for them to preview.
 
Here are some samples using the new logo file.


no processing on the person...just overall grain and color added.

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Processed using rockwell method on subject with aged yellow

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Processed using rockwell method on subject using white instead of yellow

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No pinup/vintage processing, just girl and logo, with minor adjustments and such.

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#2 rocks. White feels a little stark.
 
Logos should be created as vector art.

It was, as CA said:

Haha life is funny right? I'm loading it up in Illustrator now. Just the same right?

And after you said it was for a broke band, I was in! (I'm also in a broke band).

I'll post my results in a bit!

Illustrator is vector.
 
Logos should be created as vector art.

It was, as CA said:

Haha life is funny right? I'm loading it up in Illustrator now. Just the same right?

And after you said it was for a broke band, I was in! (I'm also in a broke band).

I'll post my results in a bit!

Illustrator is vector.

I delivered it in .PNG because it was easier to "grunge" in PS, but it was created in Illustrator. Plus, it was delivered at 5000 px by 2500 px or something ridiculous at 300dpi, an 82 meg file, so it won't have any problem with scaleability (the reason why you make it in .eps/.ai). Plus a lot less compatibility issues.
 
For t-shirt work it will have to be a vector. Which means all the "grunge" effects have to be vector as well. It will also need to be vector if it is put on any promotional products. There are t-shirt companies that can take Raster images but they are much more expensive. I spent years at a promo company tracing logos for print because there was no vector art. And believe me, we charged through the nose. Ah the good ol days when I just traced all day :)
 
Two more I just finished foundation on. Well one, with a crop of itself. Not sure how I wanna do these up yet.

Client picked number two also, from the above stuff. lol.

They don't know which one they gonna put where yet, so I'll deal with that when it comes.

She wants me to put the shot I have of her bending over on the logo also...with her hands on the A at the end. but I have not processed that image yet into a stark white background with blemish removed yet.



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For t-shirt work it will have to be a vector. Which means all the "grunge" effects have to be vector as well. It will also need to be vector if it is put on any promotional products. There are t-shirt companies that can take Raster images but they are much more expensive. I spent years at a promo company tracing logos for print because there was no vector art. And believe me, we charged through the nose. Ah the good ol days when I just traced all day :)

Well not neccessarily, If it's a screen print then it's limited by the line count of the screen (which could be as low as 45 lines per inch) and by the size of halftone dots that that mesh can resolve, you don't need infinate scalability to work within those parameters and you also don't need the 'no thickness' edge that vectors allow, block fill and halftone is it. A high resolution raster is just fine for that.
 
Raster for screens, vector for prints.
 

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