Illustration inspired by the summer trip to Brighton during covid-19 times.
When small things make you the happiest.
Inktober was created by Jake Parker in 2009 as a challenge for him to improve his inking skills and develop positive drawing habits. It has since grown into a worldwide challenge with thousands of artists creating one ink drawing ever day for the entire month of October, following a certain prompt list.
Below are my 31 illustrations that I created for Inktober 2019.
Series of illustrations about one of the biggest problems today - plastic pollution. Portraying humans in shoes’ of animals that die every day because of plastic, as well as visualising the future of our society if we don’t stop this problem.
Illustrations created for advertising campaign to help build awareness for Frontier, making the brand desirable and intriguing enough to go and try.
Targeted at lager drinking social drinkers aged 25-35 years old, looking for everyday adventures.
A set of illustrations for an Arabic alphabet (Moroccan dialect) book. The chosen words and images capture a personal view on Morocco, especially its city Marrakech.
Series of illustrations using Haynes manual graphic language to portray four out of eight subjects of sexual union in the second book of Kamasutra. These include:
The kiss. When one person turns up the other's face by holding the head and chin, and then kisses him/her, it is termed a turned kiss.
The bite. When biting is done by both the teeth and the lips, it is known as the coral and the jewel, the lip - the coral, the teeth - the jewel.
Pressing and nail marks. A mark resembling the imprint of a peacock's foot is made round the nipple by placing the thumb below and the fingers above, and then squeezing gently and firmly.
The embrace. When a woman clings to a man like a creeper twines around a tree, pulls his head down to hers to kiss him, and looks lovingly at him, this embrace is called twining of a creeper.
Series of images based on future predictions.
The “Electric Handshake” was a prediction from 1905 that posited that doctors would be able to see patients from anywhere in the globe and diagnose them through a kind of online handshake.
Prediction from 1921 - our mail will be sorted by robots and delivered by airplane.
In 1957 a Honeywell engineer predicted that by A.D. 2000 roads and streets will be replaced by a network of pneumatic tubes.
Popular Mechanics' 1928 vision of the "city of the future" predicted many levels of pedestrian and motor traffic.
Playful Space is a visual timeline of the solar system, spacesuits, and space stations with added sporting movement.
This graphic story is one of 150 original titles created by gifted young artists in the UK, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, developed under the mentorship of some of the very best illustrators and comics artists in the four countries, to coincide with the Baltic Countries Market Focus at London Book Fair 2018. It harnesses illustration and comics to transcend languages, facilitate inter-cultural collaboration, and showcase diverse emerging talent to the publishing industry.