Sticker art

In November 2007, I posted many photos of stencil art from midtown Sacramento. (Sacramento’s Urban Heiroglyphics)

At the time, I didn’t get around to displaying the many pieces of sticker art Vlady and I found on the same day in the same region. I’ll share them with you now. many of these were signed “ZITS”. A couple of them were promotional stickers rather than hand-drawn or stencil art, but were similarly plastered on public property.

Click on any image below for a larger version. The images are in chronological order as we walked.

face and heart
face & heart
Made You Look
Made You Look (zits)
computer monitor
computer monitor?
Meat Is 4 Zombies
Meat Is 4 Zombies! (zits)
No Guns, God + Government
No Guns, God + Government (zits)
Danger Kerser / Incredible Hulk
“Danger Kerser” / Incredible Hulk
sad face
sad face (zits)
whore / urine
whore / urine #1
I Can't See... I'm a Cripple... I Wear Glasses
I Can’t See… I’m a Cripple… I Wear Glasses! (zits)
Upper Playground
Upper Playground
Righteous Movement
Righteous Movement
sign full of stickers
sign full of stickers

UPDATE 1/31/2009: All these images and more street art can be found in my new Gallery.


Marketing your classes

I’ve learned a lot in the past three years about everything a teacher has to do that isn’t teaching. One of those things is marketing/selling a new course. Last year I didn’t market my design courses enough so I ended up with not enough students in them. Consequently I am teaching life science this year in addition to 3 design classes (I love biology, but most of the these students don’t want to be there; so you can imagine how much fun that is for a teacher.)

This year I’ve been doing design favors for the teacher who is in charge of T-shirt and banner printing. In exchange for a couple of T-shirt designs I did for him, he’s going to let me print a number of full-color banners on laminated paper.

I’m going to have him print up two of these 4-foot banners (click for larger image):

street art banner


Local Graffiti

Vlady and I discovered a bunch of decaying warehouses by the river bike path last Sunday. It was evident that kids used these to practice their stuff. Some of the work was outside the building, but much of it was inside. None of it was visible to many people, as this bike path is rather unknown. Graffiti artists need to practice too!

Outside:

Inside:

Apologies to the artists: I’d give you credit if I knew your names!

UPDATE 1/31/2009: All these images and more street art can be found in my new Gallery.


Free graffiti fonts to download

Here are five graffiti fonts from dafont.com you can download and install for free.

Graffiti

Keny Graffiti

Zit Graffiti

Graffiti Treat

Amsterdam Graffiti

There are 62 “graffiti” fonts at fontspace.com, but these are the most appealing to my eyes:

Whoa!

Cancontrol

RoteFlora

KrylonGothic

Bboy

A few more I found at graffitifonts.net:

Graffpitty

Homeboy

Degrassi

To install fonts on Windows:
1. Unzip the .zip font file you downloaded (right-click, choose “Extract All” and a location)
2. Drag the unzipped font file into the Fonts folder (you will find the Fonts folder in your C: drive, inside the Windows folder); font files can end in .ttf, .otf, .fon, .ttc, or .pfb, among others.


Fantastic resource for beginning graffiti artists

Coloring-pages-book-for-kids-boys.com has a wealth of wonderful “coloring pages”, including graffiti-style bubble-letters (click on the images to go to the related pages):

I have an idea to print these out and encourage students not only to imitate the styles, but color them in with special colorful touches, like highlights and shading. After becoming familiar with these styles, students would be urged to start developing their own styles.


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