



(Of course I mean the classic GT40 livery, I missed that)
Painted in Procreate :)
I really love 'painting with light' in Procreate
Three digital paintings, and a 'modular' artwork made up of various land and sea tiles
"The humans remain overconfident in their ability to conceal themselves in the abyss. They unknowingly offer up their most advanced machines as easy prey.
This leviathan is restless, so obliges them."
"There exists a code - an ever-evolving stream of data - that is used to define both the mood and the temperature of a digital space.
In many situations, the living code itself can quite easily become the mood"
I know Robot Tanks don't have voice lines but I always thought their beeps sounded a little bit Spanish-coded, and it needed a title!
Somewhere out beyond the stars, there is a cube-shaped object imbued with a powerful and ancient energy. This object is a small cardboard box, originally due to be delivered to an unknown recipient at '480 London Road'.
It is destined to spin through the cosmos until the very final moment of time, before triggering an immediate reversal in the expansion of the universe and being sent hurling in the opposite direction.
The parcel will inevitably return to Earth after countless billions of years, only to discover that it was refunded upon non-delivery and simply forgotten.
A few of my digital paintings inspired by my favourite shooters
An homage to colour fields, and Windows Teal.
Loosely inspired by a playthrough of Pokemon Red, both in terms of top-down viewpoint and a vibrant colour palette (the towns, not the game itself!)
Gamma was originally planned to come out with a more GameCube-esque palette, to differentiate from the more purple Alpha. I ended up liking the overall colour combo so left it as is, and you can hopefully see what I mean in the still image!
Hi all, I wonder if you can help - I'm keen to find some better ways to showcase artwork/prints in the home without relying too much on templates (some of which are quite bland) or AI tools (ew).
Technically speaking I can compose or enhance a mockup scene easily enough, so my main ask is what to actually include! Most examples I've seen are a simple sun ray through blinds, or a leafy plant, and they can feel a bit too 'liminial'.
I thought it would be nice to include furniture in colours or textures that compliment the piece, different framing options, or maybe even scenes that reflect the artwork meaning.
My other question is: am I overthinking this? How much do home designers consider a piece of wall art when bringing a space together?
Avoiding links so as not to self-promote, happy to edit this post if I've missed any restrictions. Thanks!