These are examples of Photoshop editing work. Matte Paintings (compilations of multiple photos), color retouching, etc.
This photo of a soldier was originally in black and white, and I recolored it in Photoshop. I believe the original was a Wikipedia commons photo.
A Photoshop exercise in which I combined multiple photos into one to create what’s known as a “Matte Painting”. This technique is how movie backgrounds are made! In this one I wanted the viewer to feel like Indiana Jones on a beach, following a trail of clues to a cave of wonders, perhaps in South America.
This photo manipulation was an early Photoshop exercise that was great practice in layer masking, and in adjusting colors to try and maintain consistency throughout the photo.
This satirical poster isn’t my best work…
But it makes me laugh and that’s all that matters.
These are textures hand-painted in Photoshop.
I do have a pen and tablet to help me out.
These rocks were hand-painted in Photoshop, and are a tile-able texture.
This is a collection of art pieces that don’t fall into the other categories.
This simple vector image of a guitar was a negative space exercise, and one of the few artistic pieces of my own that I really actually enjoy.
I’ve done some logo and graphic design work on commission.
These are a few samples.
This logo was made in illustrator for Cut The Check Productions, a radio studio and talent company.
It took a few iterations, but this two-tone dense-shape graphic picturing headphones written with the “CTC” initials was the result, with the scripted “productions” written out of the headphone cable was the clients favorite.
This Illustrator-built graphic was designed for a custom song introduction company you can find here: http://www.speedbumpintros.com/
The focus of the logo was to emphasis the audio nature of the project, which resulted in the wave-forms in negative space.
A smaller, condensed icon form of the Speed Bump logo for different use-cases (mobile graphics, famicons, etc.).
Obviously this version is a 1080p resolution for viewing clarity.