Design

Piet Zwart: The Rebellious Type


  

“Among the few I have indicated, is there no dynamic man of action, the rebel who will help determine the aspect of the collective expression of tomorrow? Ponder this question and know that to make beautiful creations for the sake of their aesthetic value will have no social significance tomorrow, will be non-sensical self-gratification. Every era contains the conditions for providing a rebel.�

- Piet Zwart

Portrait of a Rebel

Personally, I admire the rebels, the forward thinkers, the people despised by society for being “different.� Zwart was, according to several sources, “not an easy man.� He was known for his “indiscretion� and many considered him “self-centered.� When have people like him ever been understood by the mediocre?

Others recall that he was driven to excel. He worked late into the night, usually until three in the morning, set high standards for himself that others thought were unattainable by any person. He was concerned about promoting himself and paranoid about others having the wrong impression of him. As he was named The Most Influential Designer of the Twentieth Century by the Association of Dutch Designers (although some articles on Zwart list it as the Professional Organization of Dutch Designers) in 2000, he obviously succeeded in making his mark, despite the rumors and innuendos from those around him.

Many, it seems in my research probably felt more out of jealousy from Zwart’s ideals of perfection and his insistence on being involved in articles and books about him. The Oxford Journal writes, ‘Yvonne Brentjens’s new monograph… charts his struggle to arrive at an objective, scientific and technically perfect design, hence the word Vormingenieur (engineer of form).’

Piet Zwart was born on May 28th, 1885 in Zaandijk, North Holland (died in September 27th, 1977 at the age of 92). From 1902 until 1907 he attended the School of Applied Arts in Amsterdam where it is said there was little division between several disciplines as drawing, painting, architecture and applied arts. Zwart and fellow students developed by themselves with little interference from above, as teachers weren’t always present. “A smashing school with no idea of a program,” as Zwart recalls.

It was this lack of formal classroom training that led him to approach his design, especially typography in a fresh and untraditional way. While the purely horizontal grid design of straightforward type and images was the norm, leading to the Swiss School of Design in the 1940s and 1950s (also read the Noupe article on Swiss School designer, Josef Müller-Brockmann), Zwart felt his designing from his gut.

As with most geniuses, there was a self-initiated method that broke the very same rules he had never learned, or, as I suspect, he cared nothing for and wanted to break. He also experimented in the use of photography incorporated into his designs, leading to photomontages. Still, with all the rule breaking and experimentation, Zwart was concerned with readability, feeling that typography should be clear and functional. If any influence must be assigned, he used the basic principles of constructivism and “De Stijl” in his commercial work.

One must put Zwart’s work into context of the time and design influences. His use of type and montage was incredibly ahead of his time. Even today, such work is inspiring, fresh and unique. His lack of training shows a gift and inner creativity that is individual and comes from deep within. One has to wonder if Zwart’s “difficultâ€� personality, as nay-sayers put it, is a reaction to the misplaced and vociferous opinions of other contemporaries who couldn’t fathom Zwart’s designs.

While time has proved him to be a truly great creative, it must have been hard for him to put up with life as the target of harsh critiques from charlatans and mediocre talents. It’s a great lesson for designers to understand that one’s own creative vision is not fodder for other creatives to comment upon. In the long run, history will be the judge of great creativity and not the opinions of others in the field.

Zwart’s designs for a book for children on the Dutch Postal Telegraph and Telephone system. Sophisticated, fun and informative. It is an incredible visual, using his favorite bright palette and would be enjoyed by kids even today!

He started his career as an architect and he worked for Jan Wils and Berlage. As a designer, Zwart was well known because of his work for both the Nederlandse Kabelfabriek Delft (the Dutch Cable Factory in Delft) and the Dutch Postal Telegraph and Telephone. Today, a designer might look at these as boring jobs but he had great leeway over his creative output and that is yet another lesson he has for modern designers – you can take the most mundane item and make a beautiful design. Can you imagine a cable and wire company today allowing such design for their catalog of products? Perhaps Zwart’s work can be used as an example of the excitement that can be mixed with any product?

He ended up resigning from NKD in 1933 to become an interior, industrial and furniture designer. Perhaps it was his restless nature or perhaps just his desire to self-improve and his yearning to find something just out of his reach. Another lesson to us as we should always try to reach new heights with our design and never settle for the easy path but to keep searching our creative nature to improve ourselves and our design.

Zwart had been fired from the Rotterdam Academy of Fine Arts in 1933, after he had been quite explicit about the redevelopment of art education. Some say he was teaching communist ideals to his students and some say his progressive ideas had been closely linked to the innovative methods and objectives of the Bauhaus School in Dessau where he was asked to host a number of lessons in 1929.

Oddly enough, the very school that fired him was renamed after Zwart — The Piet Zwart Institute of the Willem de Kooning Academy Rotterdam. Times often change after it’s too late for the individual. It may have been these personal battles, his inner id being challenged by the industry as well as himself that led to a brilliant madness that drove incredible, ground breaking creativity.

The kitchen he designed for Bruynzeel in 1938 is a good example. It was highly progressive for its time. This was the first time that domestic appliances like a refrigerator and stove could be integrated in the design in a practical way. All the elements were designed with logical proportions, and customers could combine them as they wished. Handy details like glass containers, a pull out breadboard and storage racks made the kitchen a textbook example of comfort and efficiency.

His apple-green pressed glassware compact as tubular tea cups that sit in interlocking hexagonal saucers. ‘The emphasis on form rather than decoration,’ according to an article in New City Art, says, ‘ not only severs ties with the clutter of the Victorian past but identifies everyday items with the values—efficiency, durability, mass distribution—of emerging industrial and communications technologies.’

Early Ikea? Again, think about the time when this was designed. It was incredibly futuristic and set a standard that is still used today.

As with many who lived in the dark days of the Second World War, Zwart, along with 800 other prominent citizens were arrested and held by German soldiers. After the war, when he was released from captivity, he mainly focused on industrial design. One can only imagine what years of captivity did to him. He never spoke of those years. It is amazing he went back to creative work, albeit in another field.

One cannot have much introspection into a person’s private pain. The old saying is that an artist must suffer for their art. Zwart certainly suffered although it’s hard to tell how much of it was self-imposed. It is, however, his legacy of creativity that lives on and has lessons for the creatives of today. His drive and dedication to his vision is a great lesson. His work, if one thinks of the time and culture of his heyday, was such a departure – almost futuristic but he still managed to convince people that his vision was the best way to communicate the message.

As mentioned in this article, he was dedicated to creating a clear and vivid message for the end user. He succeeded on his own terms, despite a stumble in his career, here and there but that only propelled him farther into fame. Our lesson is that little stumbles or failures, if they can be called that and not life lessons, should always push us further into creativity while understanding the work is the most important factor. It is, after all, the legacy of our names that we will eventually leave behind.

(rb)


Stunning Digital Art Inspired by Video Games


  

Since their inception, video games have provided great inspiration for offline artists and digital artists alike. Video games generally adhere to a fantasy theme, which is perhaps what makes them so intriguing visually. Often characters are exaggerated human forms, with bulging bodies, enormous power, or great speed and agility. Many games include characters of another species, possessing magical powers and skills.

Undoubtedly video games offer some of the richest character designs. Of course video games don’t stop at character design. Entire worlds are invented for these characters to inhabit, and whilst they range from the minimal, to the vast and sprawling, these worlds are often visually intriguing.

Today we’ve compiled over 50 examples of wonderful digital art inspired by the video game format. These illustrations range from depictions of famous characters, to epic battles, landscapes and even text effects.

Digital Art Inspired by Video Games

Ry Spirit’s Video Game Art

Ry Spirit is a hugely talented digital artist who has built up a Facebook following in the thousands. His work has very unique style, being both bold/colorful and cartoony. Whilst some of his work does include sharp outlines, generally his compositions have quite soft edges, with a certain handdrawn feel to them.

We get a real sense that these pieces have been ‘painted’ rather than simply filled in with color in Photoshop. The rich shadowing and textures really make this work stand out.

Ry’s work generally put characters at the forefront. Interestingly he captures each character doing something indicative of their existence. Rather than simply placing a character on a plain background, he’ll have child-Link waking up in his bed, or pokemon mid-battle.

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Sandara Video Game Art

Sandara is widely known for her detailed, realistic fantasy artworks. She truly manages to capture the essence of each character she observes. Generally her work will utilize lighting very well, engulfing dark characters in deep shadows, whilst using glows/rays of light to bring life to the piece.

There is definitely a sense of fantasy in her work, as her compositions tend to focus on magical creatures (dragons, elves, wolfmen etc…). She also tends to base each piece around a certain color palette, which evokes the mood in each composition. Below you can observe a magical couple amidst a purple, romantic landscape, or a fierce warrior, fighting through a fiery, amber scene.

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Nezma Video Game Art

Nezma (otherwise known as Nat from Canada) is a talented digital artist with a penchant for capturing the magical world of video games. Her work shows tremendous diversity, as you can see from the examples below. She ranges from soft, cartoony drawings, to sharp vector designs, and realistic digital paintings.

What is admirable is that whatever medium she chooses, Nezma manages to capture the true essence of her character. The pieces below show great attention to colors and lighting and range from cute to ominous.

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DXSinfinite Video Game Art

DXSinfinite has some truly inspiring digital art, much of it based on video game characters. Again, this artist shows tremendous diversity in his work, and can capture an anime scene, or a highly realistic depiction of his favorite character.

His work shows great attention to form, with the vastly bugling muscles of many video game characters providing a wonderful study of the human body. We get a sense of power and energy from many of his works, and he truly captures the might behind some of these popular video game creations.

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GENZOMAN Video Game Art

Last, but certainly not least, GENZOMAN whose works are some the of most favored fantasy digital art in the collection. His work is rich in texture, lighting and details, resulting in a realistic, yet still very much fantasy outcome. He often combines his expert shading and digital painting skills with intense light effects in Photoshop, generally used to demonstrate the explosive powers of the characters he is capturing.

The backdrops for these characters are equally rich, and really place each creation in their natural setting. Each composition typically uses very bold colors and rich shadows to capture the ‘larger than life’ visuals inherent in the video game format.

Definitely an artist to keep your eye on!

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(rb)


50 Interesting Navigation Menus


  

Navigation menus are a very important part of every website design. First and foremost, they help direct visitors to the main areas of your website, regardless of what page they are viewing on your website. They also point search engine robots in the right direction (though some flashy navigation menus aren’t that SEO friendly).

Today we would like to show you 50 beautiful navigation menus; ranging from simple ones that hide discretely at the corner of the design to full blown menus that take up most of the header. No matter what type of navigational menus you tend to favor, we hope that there is a little inspiration waiting for you in the designs below. Enjoy :)

Nicely Navigated

1. Alexarts

A great looking home page that has 4 large balloons as a navigation menu with each balloon floating up whenever a visitor hovers over it.

Alexarts

2. Blogger Bake Off

A traditional horizontal navigation menu that integrates with the website design beautifully.

Blogger Bake Off

3. Small Stone Recordings

One of the coolest navigation menus on the web. Each section of the site is featured as a dial or button in the recording unit at the top of the page.

Small Stone Recordings

4. Loodo

A good navigation menu that is based upon a traditional board game.

Loodo

5. Jeff Sarmiento

A colourful vertical navigation menu. The background colour and icon that is shown when a visitor hovers over a link is different for every page.

Jeff Sarmiento

6. Fabrica De Caricaturas

A great looking home page which features a navigation menu as labels at the left hand side of an A4 piece of paper.

Fabrica De Caricaturas

7. Genes Sausage Shop

At first glance it looks like a regular vertical menu but when you look closely you will see that the designer has made the menu resemble the ‘specials’ chalkboard like you would see in a butcher shop.

Genes Sausage Shop

8. Robin James Yu

The square bubbles that are placed around the navigation menu items are placed around the site in other areas. It’s a simple design but it fits in well with the site.

Robert James Yu

9. Polar Gold

A stylish flash horizontal navigation menu. Sleek and simple.

Polar Gold

10. Madison

A grungy style navigation menu that turns red when you hover over a link.

Madison

11. Tennessee Trains & Byways

Don’t let the discrete menu at the top of the page fool you; Tennessee Trains & Byways is in contention for the largest drop down menu in the world. :)

Tennessee Trains & Byways

12. Innovative Imaging Professionals

A colourful flash menu that lists the various site pages on top of a photo.

Innovative Imaging Professionals

13. Carsonified

A cool horizontal navigation menu that fits in well with the groovy Carsonified design.

Carsonified

14. Fantasy Cartography

A fantastic home page from old mapmaker Robin C. Kuprella. The areas of the site are linked directly on the home page map. Clicking on a link will change the content in the central content box.

Fantasy Cartography

15. Bully Entertainment

A great menu that features hand drawn icons for each section of the site.

Bully Entertainment

16. Indubitablee

Beautiful hover actions and well designed sketched icons makes Indubitablee a breeze to get around.

Iindubitablee

17. Power To The Poster

A practical design in which all menu items, and any links on the page, turn red when you hover over them.

Power To The Poster

18. Fundo Los Paltos

A good looking wooden style navigation menu that shows a leaf icon whenever you over a menu item.

Fundo Los Paltos

19. Yellow Bird Project

A simple but fun menu that integrates well with the cartoon design of the rest of the website.

Yellow Bird Project

20. Pure Grips

A good looking clean corporate style horizontal menu.

Pure Grips

21. Carbonica

A simple vertical menu that shows an arrow and drawn circle when you hover over the item. Strangely, not all menu items have this effect.

Carbonica

22. Chris Jennings

Colourful bookmarks are used as menu links at the top of a torn piece of paper in this cool looking vertical navigation menu.

Chris Jennings

23. Time For Cake

An elegant drop down navigation menu. Perfectly fits both the design and subject of the site.

Time For Cake

24. Amazee Labs

Another simple yet beautiful horizontal menu that we felt was worth taking note of.

Amazee Labs

25. Guga Fit

A cool navigation menu which changes the links from blue to green when you hover over them. Simple but effective.

Guga Fit

26. Ferocious Quarterly

A ribbon style menu that shows page links on different levels.

Ferocious Quarterly

27. USU Students Association

A great looking vertical navigation menu. Bold and attention grabbing for such a simple design.

USU Students Association

28. FA Design

A stylish menu that looks great over the full screen image changing background.

FA Design

29. Biola Undergrad

A basic horizontal navigation menu that works well with the colourful design of Biola Undergrad.

Biola Undergrad

30. C & C Coffee

A fun flash based menu that playfully dangles links from the top of the page.

C & C Coffee

31. Helmy Bern

An interesting menu that wraps the menu links around a torn piece of cardboard.

Helmy Bern

32. Crumpler

An image based navigation menu that features social media integration.

Crumpler

33. B & Q

Each category shows dozens of website links under it. It’s a great example of how you can still make a website with hundreds of pages easy to navigate.

B & Q

34. From The Couch

A simple vertical drop down menu that integrates well with the blog design.

From The Couch

35. Get Me Fast

Many of the graphics in the background are links in this fun header design.

Get Me Fast

36. Eye Bridge

A graphic based menu that shows a circle around the page text when you hover over it.

Eye Bridge

37. CampLuxe

A clean professional looking naivigation menu. An easy addition to the showcase.

CampLuxe

38. NickAd

Probably not the most practical menu available but certainly one of the coolest. The NickAd page remains mostly blank apart from a small logo at the top left and bottom right of the page. Your cursor changes into a star when viewing the page. If you click on the page a horizontal menu will appear that will let you navigate the site.

NickAd

39. Envira Media

A great looking eco-style vertical navigation menu.

Envira Media

40. XHTML Cafe

Another good example of an interactive home page. The top menu and and many elements of the home page design are all clickable.

XHTML Cafe

41. Design Bombs

A minimal design that integrates with the Design Bombs website look and feel perfectly.

Design Bombs

42. Paolo Cavanna

A unique navigation menu that is implemented on a cool one page design.

Paolo Cavanna

43. Surf Station

A minimal vertical navigation menu which increases the size and weight of the menu link selected.

Surf Station

44. Racket

An innovative navigation menu that fits in well with the website’s unique design.

Racket

45. CL Designz

A fantastic design that is unique, colourful, fun and practical…oh my.

CL Designz

46. Keith Cakes

A simple horizontal menu that uses beautiful calligraphy.

Keith Cakes

47. Carbon Made

The background colour of every page is different, however the colourful navigation menu remains the same.

Carbon Made

48. Manic Design

A scrolling vertical navigation menu that moves the cursor as you scroll down the page.

Manic Design

49. HydroHolistic

A fun horizontal menu that displays a descriptive pop up of each page when you hover over a link.

HydroHolistic

50. Space O Technologies

The cartoon font fits the cosmic style of Space O Technologies perfectly. This is a one page website so the menu colours change depending on what section you are looking at.

Space O Technologies

Thanks for checking out the various navigation menus we collected to feature for you. Hopefully you found a little inspiration along the way. What are some of your favorite solutions to site navigation? Feel free to leave us your thoughts below.

(rb)


Awesome Free Texture Packs from 2011


  

As the year draws to a close, we tend to take a look back over the year and take stock. This post is here to not only sort of serve that purpose, but to also stock up on some of the year’s top free texture packs from around the web. Knowing how much use the web design community gets from resources like these, we felt like it would close the year in style to showcase some of 2011′s freshest and most useful textures that were released throughout the year.

So get your virtual web design toolboxes ready for an extra healthy heaping of these awesome resources to be piled into the mix. Some of these you may have seen throughout 2011, and some may have slid under your radar and you are seeing them for the first time. Either way, we hope that they not only provide you with new resources, but also get you inspired to start a new project or implement them into an existing one. Enjoy!

Texture Packs

18 Hand Stained and Colored Paper Textures

Get them here!

Crumpled Paper Textures

Get them here!

Bamboo Texture Pack

Get them here!

15 Natural Stone Textures

Get them here!

10 Exclusive High Resolution Wood Textures by TextureQualityPro

Get them here!

5 Subtle Blue Grunge Textures

Get them here!

Autumn Leaves Textures

Get them here!

8 Free Original Hi-Res Old Brown Paper Textures

Get them here!

27 Free High Resolution Watercolor Textures

Get them here!

Free Red Weathered Wood Texture Pack of 15

Get them here!

Around Textures

Get them here!

14 Free Simple Fabric Textures

Get them here!

6 High Resolution Grungy Wall Textures

Get them here!

Particles Textures

Get them here!

27 High Resolution Playdough Textures

Get them here!

5 Colorful Grunge Textures

Get them here!

20 Free White Textures

Get them here!

Free Grungy Green Chipping Paint Textures

Get them here!

16 Free Colorful Watercolor Textures

Get them here!

Card Tint Textures

Get them here!

25 High Resolution Storm Cloud Textures

Get them here!

Inside Vintage Books

Get them here!

Patterned Rocks Textures

Get them here!

Fruits and Berries Textures

Get them here!

Rusty Wire Grid Textures

Get them here!

19 Free Block Print Textures

Get them here!

Parss Textures

Get them here!

20 High-Res Subtle Grunge Painting Textures

Get them here!

Dried Leaves

Get them here!

Free Denim Texture Pack of 13

Get them here!

15 Natural Greenery Textures

Get them here!

Eden Texture Pack #1

Get them here!

Eden Texture Pack #2

Get them here!

Free Color Stone Textures

Get them here!

Thriller Cinematic Background Textures

Get them here!

Water Textures

Get them here!

(rb)


Design in Motion: Inspiring Speed Art Videos


  

When designers use YouTube, most times they are looking for a great tutorial or looking to learn about the basics of a new topic as quickly as possible. Some of the most popular places to turn are speed art videos. Speed art videos are an overlooked source of inspiration for many designers in the community, though. Something we hope to change with this post.

Sometimes we as designers aren’t looking for just a new technique but an entirely new process to use to achieve something. That is where these videos score so highly among their viewers. They not only show an awesome finished product, but they also help other designers see how these ‘experts’ work in their desired workspace.

Many times we can’t appreciate someone’s work without seeing and understanding the process. Fortunately speed art and process videos service many different genres of work from photo-manipulation in Photoshop, to three-dimensional work in Cinema4d. Oftentimes designers show how they use more than one program to create their finished designs.

Today, we’ve gathered some of the greatest speed art videos from YouTube in an attempt to inspire and enlighten you. There’s something that should cater to a little bit of everybody, so enjoy the videos!

The Videos

Robots (Dirty Politics Remix by DJ Pete Marriott) by whoiskgainez

The purpose of this video was to serve as a bit of promotion for the song used in the video. The artist (also the author) created work inspired by the song title and lyrics, creating robots from scratch in Adobe PhotoShop.

 

NY After All by AlexanderKoshelkov

This is an absolutely amazing video of a photo-manipulation done with the help of some brushes and a couple of pictures. The finished artwork is absolutely amazing and the designer’s ease in their workspace is crazy!

 

Scarlett Johansson by Nico Di Mattia (macpulenta)

Nico Di Mattia gives us an example of how some artists do paintings in Photoshop with tablets and what ever other tools they desire. It’s really amazing to see a body of work go from sketches to a wonderful, realistic painting.

 

Transformers Movie Poster by SherbertMelon

Who doesn’t love the the Transformers? This video is a wonderful photo-manip turned movie poster for the series. The depth of knowledge of the designer is absolutely mind blowing, as is the finished product.

 

Kanye by IModernArtis

By now, you’ve been wowed by spectacular work. Sometimes, however, we don’t need to be inspired by the most difficult work, but by simple work that makes sense. This designer goes through the process of creating a simple but wonderful graphic.

 

Spiderman 3 by giando110188

Comic book characters are obviously a major source of inspiration and this artist shows us a wonderful and extremely realistic painting video. There are many things to learn from this video, even if you are not a digital painter. This is a must see, indeed.

 

PARIS (HD) by GIBSDESIGN

Watch this designer squeeze almost 3 hours of spectacular photo-manipulation work into 5 minutes. The focus here is on Paris, and with the help of some plugins, we get to see the creation of a completely different image.

 

 Extreme car repair and tuning by AlexanderKoshelkov

If you’ve ever tuned into the MTV show, ‘Pimp My Ride’, this speed art video is definitely going to tickle your fancy. The designer here takes a picture of a no good car and takes it from nothing to something.

 

Beyonce by S. Maguire (dscru)

This is easily one of the best speed painting videos you will find on YouTube. This artist is extremely talented and created an extremely realistic depiction of the superstar, Beyonce. This one is just absolutely amazing and inspiring.

 

First Blood by SherbertMelon

As we can see, photo-manipulations and paintings are popularly displayed in speed art videos. This designer decided to show us his process when dealing with client work (strict graphic design work) as well.

 

 DOMOZILLA (HD) by GIBSDESIGN

The designer of this destructive photo-manipulation decided to add a touch of humor on this piece. While it’s still inspiring, it’s nice to be able to chuckle at the finished result.

 

Dragon by cgsbgs

This artist seems to demonstrate amazing control over what many would believe to be an extremely complex topic; dragons. This artist draws and paints a dragon from scratch that almost pops off the screen.

 

NY Tsunami by MvHighway1

This artist makes photo-manipulation look extremely easy with this depiction of New York’s last days. The finished piece is what some would call ‘epic’ and watching the video is almost like watching a magician work. Simply stunning.

 

Moment 4 Life by whoiskgainez

An ode to a wonderful song, this artist (also the author) creates a simple, yet elegant piece from one photograph. Once again, there is inspiration in the process as well as the technique for those who enjoy simpler methods.

 

Apple Forever by AlexanderKoshelkov

Many of the photo-manipulation speed videos are there to show the muscle of the designer. This designer created a piece that not only showcased his personal skill, but also showed his condolences for the passing of Steve Jobs. This is not only amazing, but heartfelt as well.

 

Someone Like Adele by crazybonkers

This artist is extremely big on the photo-realistic look and is obviously very skilled at it. He seems to be much more detailed and intricate than most and his images are really spot on to the people in his portraits.

 

Horse by A1R14

Though a pretty simple final image, the production of the design seems to be very intricate and a wonderful journey though blending. Oftentimes, it’s hard for designers to get blending images just right, but this speed art video may help you out a bit the next time you are trying to blend several images.

 

Music App by MalcovDesigns

Interface design is becoming increasingly popular as the demand for smartphones increases. It seems like many designers are shifting towards that focus and fortunately, this designer recorded his process for us to see and learn some things. The final design is absolutely beautiful.

 

Anime Girl by kkamdia

Of course, when it comes to art, there are many different styles to choose from. This artist has decided to show us the process of creating anime characters in PhotoShop.

 

Wolf by TheSpeedArtist

Aside from the amazing final image, another amazing thing about this video is that it is made entirely in GIMP. Far too often people underestimate the power of GIMP, but this video and this artist show that there can be no limitations on great work.

 

Earth Collapse by LearnMeHow

It’s one thing for a designer to be able to put different pictures together, but it’s another when a designer can create their own renders and put them together. This designer takes us through their process, beginning with creating a render in 3Ds Max.

 

Albert Einstein by Martin Missfeldt (mssfldt)

Another speed painting in Photoshop, but this time it isn’t just a picture of a pop icon. This artist takes a stab at painting the very early innovator, Albert Einstein. The photo-realism is surprising, as if this was a picture taken.

 

Do I Have a Soul by qMarka

This video shows an artist go through a completely creative process. This is great because we aren’t just copying an already taken picture, we are watching an artist go through their individual process.

 

Cartoon Cat Character by cgsbgs

This is another imaginative piece created by an artist. The ability to create the scenery and come from a completely creative place is always extremely interesting to see.

 

Avant-Garde by MalcovDesigns

Sometimes as a designer you have to step outside the box and have the courage to do something bold and different. This designer did exactly that and recorded his process. This is a very inspiring design/photo-manipulation.

(rb)


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