More Lost and Found: Murine for the Eyes

I’m not sure how old this is, probably sometime between 1934 and the 1940’s. I found this while crawling under my house, which was built in 1934. Crawling under the house? Yes. A few years back we noticed a terrible smell in our house. After a few days of being completely repulsed by the growing odor, I decided to take action, and crawled under my old pier and beam foundation to inspect.

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On one side of the house there’s a 4′ crawl space and the other, maybe 1′. And as my luck had in store for me, the stink was coming from the 1′ side. After literally hours of breathing dust that had not been bothered for 76 years, I found the problem, a 30 lb raccoon rotting away and no way to reach it. So, with my not-to-quit mentality I came up with a plan. I’ll crawl over and under the air conditioning ductwork to get within a garden rack distance, and drag the critter within reach and then push it into a garbage bag. Option 2, let it rot and dry up, and be miserable for weeks to come. Needless to say, I went with the first plan.

Most people would have worn a mask of some sort over their face to keep from breathing too much dust and to help with the order, but not me. I decided that wouldn’t be necessary. After 2 hours of maneuvering air ducts and breathing dust, I got in position, hooked the rack and started to drag it toward me. It was covered in more maggots than I had ever seen, and so foul in odor I had to retreat. Then panic set in, I couldn’t remember how to get out of the maze of ductwork. As I backed out on my belly, coughing, eyes watering, and realized I wasn’t coming back in if I got out of this alive, so I went for it again.

Turning around I made a last ditch effort to get this critter in the garbage bag, and at last with my trusty rack had my way. Now, all I had to do is get out. Thoughts went through my head of a 911 call to extract me from the house. Not only would that be embarrassing, I could die before someone found me. My kids were gone to camp, my wife and I were divorced and she hadn’t been around for years and my dogs thought I was having fun under there.

Determined and nauseous, I finally found a way out, dragging my rack and garbage bag the entire time. Upon my exit, I was greeted with fresh air in such generous fashion it made me vomit for 15 minutes straight.

But during my journey to the underworld, I also, collected treasures, this “Murine for the Eyes” bottle and a couple of toys that appeared to be from the 1950’s. When I saw the silk-screened type style on the bottle, I thought I had hit the mother load. Hand drawn type, I can get enough of it. The toys were pretty cool too.

Was it worth it? Yes. Would I do it again? Maybe, if there was a treasure in store for me.

T-Shirt Illustrations for Billy Jealous

This is a series of illustrations I produced for a line of t-shirts for the Billy Jealousy brand some time back. The creative direction was inspired by an old Asian stamp collection I stumbled upon. We collaborated on the shirt construction as well. Very nice organic fiber Ts with a super great fit. But, with the downturn of the economy the line has not yet gone through final production.

So here’s a preview, I can’t wait any longer to share the artwork we produced for them. So here you go! Hope you enjoy.

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Special thanks to Zach Bard and Diana Zaky for their collaborative contribution with layout, distressing and translations. Miss you both!

From the Archive – Vector Illustration Circa 1995

Okay, so I’ve been super busy, and not much time to post. Although, I should have some exciting new work to share very soon. I’ve decide to create a “From the Archive” category so I can share things from my past that didn’t have the benefit of the bloggersphere world we live in today.

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his is a illustration I produced in approximately 1995. Frankly, my memory is a bit fuzzy, but with that in mind, if I remember correctly we were beta testing some web based software for Macromedia, which I think was called Shocked. Not Shockwave. Basically, it was a bowser-based solution to zoom into vector images. Keep in mind that the developers of Flash were probably still in junior high at this time, so this seemed pretty cool at the time. Even cooler you could zoom up to 7200 percent.

We saw it as an opportunity to have fun and decided to design a site that showed off the technology. This was the main navigation page. And of course we intentionally made the page links 1 point type, to force the user to use the zoom feature. Explore the illustration and find links to different pages, with messages and discover bits of wisdom and treasures. In a nut shell, that’s pretty much it.

Produced with Macromedia Freehand, I remember when I did it, blends in Freehand and Illustrator were not so great, and hard to use. In our office we would debate, for hours, whether Freehand or Illustrator was better, and pretty much split down the middle. But as time has passed, Adobe clearly won that battle. Viva Illustrator!