Here I've been experimenting with different toggle switch images, trying to reduce a complex chrome plated switch into just three colours. Tricky. Decided to settle on four colours to create the illusion. I did want to use chrome effect paint to give it that fake metallic look but it's weird stuff. When you look at it at one angle, it appears lighter in contrast to it's neighbouring colour, move your head slightly and it suddenly becomes darker. Not helpful.
Saturday, 18 October 2008
Here I've been experimenting with different toggle switch images, trying to reduce a complex chrome plated switch into just three colours. Tricky. Decided to settle on four colours to create the illusion. I did want to use chrome effect paint to give it that fake metallic look but it's weird stuff. When you look at it at one angle, it appears lighter in contrast to it's neighbouring colour, move your head slightly and it suddenly becomes darker. Not helpful.
Monday, 1 September 2008
Following a major cock-up in positioning the speaker grille too low down, I have now put the telephone handset to the left of the panel and repositioned the radar. I suppose that kind of error is inevitable when you leave a project for too long. Or is it to do with the amount of paint I am spraying up my nose? Anyway... resisting the temptation to throw the whole painting in the bin, I persevered and got to the stage pictured above. More work on the radar and I'll be a happy man. Monday, 2 June 2008


Looking at this stuff I suppose what I love about the artwork (on the toy and on the box) is that even if it is badly drawn/printed it has it's own charm, a kind of childlike innocence. It looks like children had designed and decorated these toys for themselves. Unfettered imagination. Wonderful.
Sunday, 11 May 2008
Well..what happened there?...It must be 8 months since I last updated this blog. Blimey. Anyway...I'm back on track and I've added a few more instruments to the 'Command Centre' mock-up (pictured above) and the design is really starting to take shape. I made some sketches of cockpit and control panels during a recent visit to the Imperial War Museum and developed the drawings in Adobe Illustrator. At the moment I am working on the design for a classic radar screen image - the kind you see in war films where the submarine radar operator stares anxiously at a line that sweeps round a circular green screen. Trying to make sense of the 'green porridge' I think they call it. How to make it stand out?...green fluorescent paint? Luminous? Can you get luminous paint in aerosol spray? Submarines, radar and luminous paint..now that's going to send my mind off on another thousand tangents...
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