Monday, December 19, 2011





Virginia Highway Incorporated contacted me to paint logos on their fleet of 53-foot trailers. Each trailer got a treatment of one logo per side. All in all, I painted 15 trailers for a total of 30 logos painted. I really enjoyed this project and would DEFINITELY love to do it again.
All truck logos painted with Oneshot sign painter's enamel.

Sticky Rice. Sushi restaurant and bar, Richmond, Virginia.




The bottom picture you see is not my work. It is a sign that was created by an friend of the restaurant who braved
the narrow outcropping of the building- a slanted, 18 inch sketchy ledge- to recreate with a spraypaint a logo that he held
a copy of in his hand. That is an impressive feat.
However, it lacked, in my opinion, the finished, refined look that the rest of the restaurant presented to the public. They have a
website, a blog, and they've sponsored a magazine (I think). I said to the business owner that it would be smart to create a
united front, visually, and have the painted logo look --exactly-- like the logo on the company's stickers, ads, menus, and website. In that sense, I believe that I helped to make an improvement. The top picture is the finished result. I also harnessed myself in while braving that ledge.
Check out Sticky Rice, or its sister restaurant, Togogo, if you are ever in Richmond and would like to eat some good sushi.
Painted with latex paint.

Togogo. Sushi takeout spot in Richmond, Virginia. Before and after.




On the left is the building before I helped to convince them that a larger sign would really help them out.
The arrangement of the bricks created a sort of "frieze" that framed the letters nicely. I thought
that it would be a nice understated touch to house most of the letters within that frame and let
the lowercase g's and the bottom half of the Japanese character hang out. Latex paint with brushes. Also-
good sushi if you are in town.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Check out my new book!




This is a compilation of friends' work. I have some work in this as well. Really enjoyed working with the Blurb.com interface. Because of the business model (the books are not necessarily made in bulk), each book is a bit more expensive to make than I would like. HOWEVER, this is such a cool idea for a website. Thanks! -Marshall

Monday, February 28, 2011

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Sketch



Working on some sketches for a t-shirt company called DreamLikeReality. Ahh T-shirts... the sweetest plum.

Sharpie.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Some stuff for the book. Marker, recycled old sketches and throwaway drawings, gloss medium, xerox machine. (Pics were taken before completion)





1

For J.B. Watkins Elementary readers.

Dusted off Illustrator CS2 and created this today. I like this process. I think that the more I work with this program, the more I enjoy it. I really prefer working totally manually, or "analog" as my good friend George puts it. This is going to be printed onto t-shirts for 100-point achievers.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Book preview.

One of my submissions to the book I am making. Cut paper collage- from old drawings I made and re-cycled, sort of.