These are the kind of images (particularly woman and skull top left) that would translate beautifully into fashion prints for clothes. Embroided line work that captures the energy of your pen lines would be exquisite on t-shirts.
Don't mean to sound silly or cheapen your work here, but high end fashion prints would be something! Plus this 60's retro drawing style is around a lot at the moment.
Pero, ¿cuántos ejemplares existen? La verdad es que parece muy tentador, Óscar.
ReplyDeleteEstán realmente bien, ¿eh? Me gusta mucho tanto negro intenso. (¿Se clarean un poco las hojas?)
ReplyDeleteUn solo ejemplar. No estan demasiado bien impresas y como las lineas son finitas fotografian mal.
ReplyDelete¡Aaah, me lo temía! Pues qué lástima no poder ver las líneas en todo su esplendor. Pregunta indiscreta: ¿con qué herramienta(s) sueles dibujar?
ReplyDeletepero que manchas tan poderosas! la tinta y esas lineas bien incisivas...
ReplyDeleteGracias. Casciani...Pero para un galito. No es que vos seas manco, nene!!
ReplyDeleteJuán, Esos dibujos esaban hechos con lo que en Argentina llamamos un plumin. Una pluma muy finita y con la parte de atras de un pincel.
sí, señor!
ReplyDeleteyou've broken copyright against yourself
ReplyDelete¡Vamos todavía con el siempre servicial y nunca bien ponderado plumín! (¡¿La parte de atrás de un pincel?!... Realmente notable).
ReplyDeleteThese are the kind of images (particularly woman and skull top left) that would translate beautifully into fashion prints for clothes. Embroided line work that captures the energy of your pen lines would be exquisite on t-shirts.
ReplyDeleteDon't mean to sound silly or cheapen your work here, but high end fashion prints would be something! Plus this 60's retro drawing style is around a lot at the moment.
I dis a lot of drawings for clothing in the past. I even done designs for tapestries that were sold in an art gallery long ago.
ReplyDeleteWas it the Bayeux tapestry ?
ReplyDeleteIt was the Tapestry of la reconcha de tu tia Felicity.
ReplyDelete