Tag Results: Graphic Design

Cover art for my homie E-Val Styles’ upcoming mixtape… We sat down and rapped a bit about concepts for the cover a few weeks back.  I played around with themes based on those discussions, and could not come up with any art that was ART.
Keep in mind… I’m on a crusade, to distance my work from that of other “designers” so, it’s important for me to maintain a large portion of creative freedom in a project.  Some clients just hit me with a quick idea, and allow me to run with it… while others, have brainchildren that need molding.  In this case… I kinda seized the wheel!  While, I see E-Val Styles as a brilliant New YorCarolian emcee… he makes a lot of music for the streets.  I felt that his new art needed to be something totally different than what his fan base is used to seeing me create. 
So, how did I come to choose this as the visual representation for a hard street album?  While meeting with him at his home studio, Val knew from the jump that he wanted the album covers for this mixtape series to be black and white, and that he wanted black duct tape on it.  He had some other ideas that I jotted down, regarding text placement, etc.  When I hopped in the car that day on the way to pick up my son, The Professor… I visualized the completed artwork the way he wanted it.  Later on, I combed the net for photos of duct tape, and even considered doing a mini-photo shoot to get things the way I wanted them for the composition.  A few days later when I sat down ready to execute the project, I was unable to get into it…  I just wasn’t feeling any of the things that we discussed.  So, I began work on some things for another artist that I had in cue.
I usually have music playing in order to keep the creative juices flowing, and one day as I was working on something that is so past due, [I’m embarrassed to say  what it is] Raekwon’s Only Built for Cuban Linx worked it’s way into my iTunes Genius Mix.  This album was a street album indeed, but lyrically and production wise… it’s a masterpiece!  It was at that time that I began to get back into the Black Duct Tape project.  As Rae and Ghost’s poetic tales of drug life played, I began to visualize imagery of censorship, the all seeing eye, big brother, the similarities between traps in the concrete jungle and down south.  Eventually, I found an old “Big Brother” propaganda piece, and tried to work it into a 5” x 5” canvas a few different ways. The end result is what you see…
Big Brother, with his mouth taped off, and eyes shielded.  Crumpled paper, the New York city skyline (in the distance… symbolic of the artist’s roots), and dark “organic substance” spattered across it all.  Then of course, the black duct tape… added to appear as though it’s actually on the poster.  Interpretations could include… The Street Cat defeating the feds… Operating Under the Radar… The Underdog taking the Evil Empire hostage… etc. Either way I think it’s perfect for the street artist that spits a few light years ahead of his peers.

Sun & StylesCover art for my homie E-Val Styles’ upcoming mixtape… We sat down and rapped a bit about concepts for the cover a few weeks back. I played around with themes based on those discussions, and could not come up with any art that was ART.

Keep in mind… I’m on a crusade, to distance my work from that of other “designers” so, it’s important for me to maintain a large portion of creative freedom in a project. Some clients just hit me with a quick idea, and allow me to run with it… while others, have brainchildren that need molding. In this case… I kinda seized the wheel! While, I see E-Val Styles as a brilliant New YorCarolian emcee… he makes a lot of music for the streets. I felt that his new art needed to be something totally different than what his fan base is used to seeing me create.

So, how did I come to choose this as the visual representation for a hard street album? While meeting with him at his home studio, Val knew from the jump that he wanted the album covers for this mixtape series to be black and white, and that he wanted black duct tape on it. He had some other ideas that I jotted down, regarding text placement, etc. When I hopped in the car that day on the way to pick up my son, The Professor… I visualized the completed artwork the way he wanted it. Later on, I combed the net for photos of duct tape, and even considered doing a mini-photo shoot to get things the way I wanted them for the composition. A few days later when I sat down ready to execute the project, I was unable to get into it… I just wasn’t feeling any of the things that we discussed. So, I began work on some things for another artist that I had in cue.

LinxI usually have music playing in order to keep the creative juices flowing, and one day as I was working on something that is so past due, [I’m embarrassed to say what it is] Raekwon’s Only Built for Cuban Linx worked it’s way into my iTunes Genius Mix. This album was a street album indeed, but lyrically and production wise… it’s a masterpiece! It was at that time that I began to get back into the Black Duct Tape project. As Rae and Ghost’s poetic tales of drug life played, I began to visualize imagery of censorship, the all seeing eye, big brother, the similarities between traps in the concrete jungle and down south. Eventually, I found an old “Big Brother” propaganda piece, and tried to work it into a 5” x 5” canvas a few different ways. The end result is what you see…

Big BrotherBig Brother, with his mouth taped off, and eyes shielded. Crumpled paper, the New York city skyline (in the distance… symbolic of the artist’s roots), and dark “organic substance” spattered across it all. Then of course, the black duct tape… added to appear as though it’s actually on the poster. Interpretations could include… The Street Cat defeating the feds… Operating Under the Radar… The Underdog taking the Evil Empire hostage… etc. Either way I think it’s perfect for the street artist that spits a few light years ahead of his peers.

BDT Back



“Don’t mistake legibility for communication.”

by designer David Carson (shown below in the 2007 documentary, Helvetica)

“Don’t mistake legibility for communication.”

by designer David Carson (shown below in the 2007 documentary, Helvetica)



My Man Redd 2.0 vector illustration by NativeSun
When I created my first vector portrait (shown right) 7 years ago, it was of a smiling Redd Foxx as his epic character Fred G. Sanford [and the “G” stands for… (insert clever word)].  
Last night while watching reruns of Sanford and Son on DVD, I remembered the first time I saw an old picture of a young Redd, when I was a child, in Jet magazine.  
In order to demonstrate my growth as an illustrative designer, I decided to revisit My Man Redd, by doing a new portrait of him from his younger years.
Enjoy!

My Man Redd

My Man Redd 2.0 vector illustration by NativeSun

When I created my first vector portrait (shown right) 7 years ago, it was of a smiling Redd Foxx as his epic character Fred G. Sanford [and the “G” stands for… (insert clever word)].  

Last night while watching reruns of Sanford and Son on DVD, I remembered the first time I saw an old picture of a young Redd, when I was a child, in Jet magazine.  

In order to demonstrate my growth as an illustrative designer, I decided to revisit My Man Redd, by doing a new portrait of him from his younger years.

Enjoy!


The response to my MosDef art piece has been great!  I appreciate you all reposting my work… please check out the other art pieces in my archive www.nativesun803.com/archive  and more importantly LEAVE FEEDBACK… Us starving artists need that motivation!
P.S.— There’s also a Talib Kweli piece.

The response to my MosDef art piece has been great!  I appreciate you all reposting my work… please check out the other art pieces in my archive www.nativesun803.com/archive  and more importantly LEAVE FEEDBACK… Us starving artists need that motivation!

P.S.— There’s also a Talib Kweli piece.


#nowplaying Junior - Mama Used to Say

More Mother’s Day nostalgia… My professional graphics career started long before I had any formal training.  These album covers were a part of my parents’ record collection.  Junior Giscombe’s Ji and Anita Baker’s The Songstress were two of the first albums that I recall getting accolades for on my drawings as an 80’s kid.  The praise that I received from my family members gave me the green light to pursue bigger challenges like War’s The World is a Ghetto, and Parliament’s Motor Booty Affair! I wish I still had my drawings from those days to share with my children.


Stuff I like...