Illustration

Thursday, 22nd November 2007

Who says banner ads don’t work? I was looking at this beautiful building (check out the staircase) and there was a banner link to the 2007 winners of the KRob Architectural Delineation, Architectural Drawing & Illustration Competition. The winning pieces are fantastic, well worth a look. Preview samples here:


Tuesday, 18th September 2007

I’ve had these Supermarket covers knocking about for a while now, I love the subject matter (I love drawings of cities) and the styling and detail in them. I must be in a mode to make connections between things right now, but what struck me was the similarity between the night-time Supermarket cover below and this TWA poster for New York.

Thursday, 26th July 2007

You know that feeling you get when you’ve had an idea to do something, and you’ve not got around to doing it for ages, then you come across something that shows that not only did someone else have the same idea, they’ve gone and implemented it? And very well, too. Well, I’m getting that now. Stephen Barnwell has made these incredible banknotes for the fictional Antarctic colony of Nadira, and for various other fictional microstates. There’s also the non-existent denominations of the Dream Dollars, which you can download, and various other products which you can buy. I think the whole thing is fantastic.

Still, it doesn’t stop me doing what I intended to do as my intention is different. I just like banknotes, I could look at the designs of them for hours, and hours, and hours. A bit like maps really — give me a good atlas and I could look at it all day. Maybe I just have an obsession with finely drawn lines? Either way, I have a collection of images grabbed from around the net. I’ve linked to the original page where it still exists.

First, the aforementioned Stephen Barnwell’s latest. The 13-dollar note from the State of War:

Then a selection of Robert Deodaat Emile Oxenaar’s designs for the banknotes of The Netherlands, which to me represent the only real argument against the Euro. Why couldn’t the European Commission have got him to design the money? Found on this article on Creative Review’s blog:




And then (and it took me a while to re-find these) the beautifully simple banknote designs by Herbert Bayer of the Bauhaus. These were done for the 1923 emergency issue of banknotes for the State of Thuringia in the Weimar Republic. The only place I could find a decent image was through the eBay store “Room 606”, where you can actually buy original notes.

I also came across some images of banknotes that feature scientists, engineers and mathematicians. I won’t post the full images, but here’s a couple of exquisite details from the old one pound note. It’s about time Newton was restored to one of the denominations of the British pound:


From the same site, various details:




I love banknote designs so much.

Thursday, 12th July 2007

Yet another great discovery, the portfolio site of Jonas Bergstrand. I love the style of these examples, though look at his site, as it shows his full range of skills, including some fantastic sculpture and typography.


Thursday, 21st June 2007

This is beautiful. I found it on artless, which is a site that’s not updated very often, but when they do it’s always worth the wait. Thing is, I wish they’d explain their stuff a little more. What is this, what’s it about? I feel stymied by my lack of knowledge of Japanese.

Thursday, 21st June 2007

I just came across this article on Japanese rubber stamps on Ping Mag. Go read.

Sunday, 17th June 2007

I got to James Jean’s site via Computerlove (a site I very much recommend) and was immediately impressed by the quality of the illustration. Some of them remind me of the frontispiece for a set of encyclopaedias I have, dating from the 1930s: great tableaux of activities, incredible detail and fantastic technique and artistry. I’ll scan the frontispiece in soon… meanwhile, pay a visit to his site, and maybe commission him or something: James Jean.

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