Bartop Arcade Cabinet – Personal Project
Here’s an bartop arcade cabinet design that I made in Sketchup. A labor of love, soon to be built! Layout was used to make building plans.
Here’s an bartop arcade cabinet design that I made in Sketchup. A labor of love, soon to be built! Layout was used to make building plans.
An inspirational painting we did for David’s room in Season 5 of Army Wives. It was a digital painting based on a rough reference sketch by Matthew Jacobs.
Here’s a painted Rendering of an ad-hoc computer that the character Aaron assembles from spare parts. The prop master wanted something that looked realistic, yet visually interesting so we wanted to pre-visualize it before starting to put it together.
Here’s a series of animated computer screens I did for Revolution. most were created in flash, the rest in After Effects. and were designed to animate along with the actor based on their keyboard input. Some were interactive and others were just animations and videos. One of these had a fun “glitch” effects that I got to design. Turned out very cool.
On Revolution, I got to experiment with all sorts of aging techniques, styles and textures to make signs look like they had been weathered in the world. Here are a smattering of these signs that show how much visual interest the aging adds.
Here’s an assortment of banners and fictional ride artwork for an amusement park set that was shot as an actual abandoned amusement park in myrtle beach.  Very tight time constraints on these ones.
A bunch of graphics I did for Hannagan’s, a fictional Americana Memorabilia-decorated restaurant, E.G. TGI Fridays or Ruby Tuesdays circa 1990. There’s fictional stained glass printed on plexi, menus, table tents, door etch-mark and booth separators.
For Army Wives season 6 we went to Africa to do peacekeeping. Due to the sensitive nature of the story, the writers opted to make a fictional country instead of a real one, thus was born “Narubu.” This included the creation of maps, TV news, web pages and more to make the place seem real. I’ve included an assortment of the items we’ve created to help flesh out this non-existant place. I hand-drew every road, river and railway in the country. I used a mix of topography from various African countries to develop the idea that the country was split with a mountain range, divided into east and west segments. All of the city, river and lake names imply a historical french colonization as well as a resurgent indigenous culture.
Here’s some computers screens we did for the Narubu briefing room. Many were animated. Some were static.
Here is a map that I created to show that the Monroe Republic means business! Done for season 1 of Revolution
There’s also map I did to show the different territories in the post-power world of revolution.