[Steve] Thanks for your reactions to the first round of our look back at Threadless Past. We would've published round two sooner, but my real life got in the way. I've been busy over on Matt's side of the world this past week, in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia, speaking at TechEd Southeast Asia (you can find my picture under "featured speakers" if you need a good scare). I've found that there's no worse time to write about tee shirts than when I'm in the midst of heavy geeking: my brain goes all boorish on me. But now the conference is over, I've got an afternoon and an internet connection: 11-20, here I come. Of the shirts we talked about last week, I found in retrospect that I liked two or three of them well enough that I might think about buying them if they were reprinted: Evil Mother Fucking Web Design without the text, maybe Destroy Nifkin, and definitely Red 365. In the ten designs we talk about here, I'm also in that 3-for-10 place: I'd buy Jake's My Elephant Loves Me and Nike Stumpo's She Shoot and He Shoot. [Bananaphone] This week we are looking at 11 - 20 of the threadless design archives. We can see by now they are starting to spread their wings a bit, and some more styles and concepts are coming into play. However for me, there are no must haves this week and no real classics. That doesn't mean we shouldn't ramble on about them and post nice pictures though. And here it is, more of the old days that people keep blindly wishing for. My Elephant Loves Me [Retired]
In addition to the sheer art-historic interest of My Elephant Loves Me, I also admire how Jake was pimping the Threadless project with all his heart back in the day: this is the first Threadless branded tee shirt. The scrawny rough-drawn elephant to the left shows early signs of the technique that Jake perfects in his more recent work. I particularly like the way the thread works with the text, both graphically and thematically (threadless.com, thread lost from the threadless elephant: get the thread here?). The three horizontal elements (two lines of text, and then the thread) get thinner and longer as you move down, which creates a nice right-flowing dynamic just energetic enough to lean against the greater mass of the elephant. I have to think that Threadless wouldn't have any problem negotiating reprint rights for this shirt from Jake, so, I guess the status of this shirt shows us that "[Retired]" isn't so much about not being able to reprint a shirt contractually as it is about wanting to be sure they're beyond the temptation to reprint, even if the thought occasionally occurs to them. Which is too bad in this case. I have to admit I'd buy this for sedimental reasons if I could, just to experience the joy of wearing a Threadless-brand shirt designed by Jake. Oh, what a feeling.... [Bananaphone] The first threadless self promotional tee comes from the one most people will know as Skaw. It isn't a bad tee for the time but it also isn't that good either, the sketchyness of the elephant drawing is somewhat contradicted by the text, which I assume is Arial or something similar, and it's harsh edges. I know that Steve seems to be pretty enthused with this design, but I think if they were going to redo it what they need is a mix of bananaphone and buster brown with an elephant head. That's just me though... but I would rather see threadless use all it's learnt to create something new than to bring back a design antique that I don't think would share the same popularity. Skaw is actually sending me a payment over paypal to conclude this review of his design, and thus that is all I have to write about it. Trueistrue (Print) [Retired]
I have to admit, my eye has a hard time getting into the Trueistrue print. The harsh contrast between the horizontal lines in the background and the angled elements in front is accentuated by the dots to the right. The effect is of strong movement to the left and then disintegration. Maybe it's a plane breaking up in the sky, or maybe it's more abstract: whatever it is, it feels rather chaotic and off-putting to me, not nearly as engaging as most of the stuff of Mike's I found when I explored on into his sites. Maybe the problem is that I have a hard time putting aside my tee shirt aesthetic here and thinking about posters. So it goes. [Bananaphone] This is actually a pretty nice design, the colours are rather desaturated to soften the edges of the harsh edged abstract elements (try saying that a few times) and it comes across as quite 80s. I can just imagine wearing a pair of dunlop vollies and a headband, and going for a casual game of tennis while wearing this as a tee. The design fills the composition of a poster well, the breaks between the various elements create visual interest and movement. The trendy halftones and diagonal line overlaps also add to the design and manage to work without the trend of the time feeling tired. If this were a nice little abstract tee, instead of a poster, I imagine it would have done pretty nicely in bortweins design not illustration comp. Beware The Robots [Retired]
Beware The Robots exemplifies the simply joy these early Threadless designers found in ambiguously complex drama, low-resolution technical strategies, and tricky use of negative space (I'm thinking Moltar, Nifkin, and Milts here). There's some interesting cubist energy going on in the way we see several different aspects of the 60s beach-house to the left. There's some drama involved in wondering exactly what that guy is running away from (the pictured monster? bad party conversation?). And of course there's the pleasure of imagining that he's about to run through the bathhouse/Greek temple on the cliff and plunge to his death in the abyss/ocean beyond. Thank goodness it doesn't seem to have been printed in my size: I'm safe from temptation even if it's reprinted. [Bananaphone] Milt... Mutant I'd like to touch. And with that has anyone noticed that the robot in this design is like a pixel robot version of Quasi Modo? The design itself feels a tiny bit off balanced, the shack and large pixel gathering to the bottom right (forming what seems like a cliff) has alot of weight to offbalance the robot head, but I still get the feeling it hasn't done the job fully. It is also obvious that whilst the robot may weild a big stick and/or arm, the man himself should probably be paying more attention to the stick he is tripping over (check the small pixel outcrop). Apart from all this, a small part of me does enjoy the message. People, it's about time we stood up in what we believe in and defended our sea shacks from giant robots. Assume The Position [Retired]
Assume the Position brings home a little bit of airline safety instruction and proposes to display it on our chests. It turns out that, in my humble opinion at least, most airline safety instructions are ludicrous. In the event of a water landing, for instance, the plane will break up and your body will turn into mashed fish-food: you will have no use for the flotation device under the seat in front of you. Just so, whatever has happened to cause the forward forces represented by the red arrows in Assume the Position will shortly drive the cockpit through the plane like a train through a subway tunnel: ducking is just going to insure that your skull goes first. Granted, the design is drawn simply. It offers a bit of poignancy in the form of the child who will soon die in its mother's lap. It surprises the modern eye with its unnecessary color profligacy (six colors and the background? for this?). I like the way that the reds, blues, and whites all fit into the perspective fading towards the upper right of the shirt. But mostly, I see this as teaching a sad if salutary lesson. It's never useful to duck. Really. Facing forward is the way to live (and die, for that matter). [Bananaphone] This design has always reminded me of Mythbusters when they conducted various experiments to check the effectiveness on the brace position, to reduce pressure on one's neck. This design doesn't show the hold perfectly correctly but gets the basic elements of it right. It sacrifices some realism for the sake of aesthetics. Unlike some instructional diagrams I have seen however, the woman infront is failing to suffocate her baby underneath her armpit. Either way it's a nice enough design and instructional bullshit on tshirts is quite popular even today, so I can only imagine that this was a trendy tshirt years ago. Even despite the lack of illustrating polish it looks pretty good on the tee, which is enchanced by its large size and placement which allows the design to flow with the force of the impact. Your Dad 2001 [Retired]
Your Dad 2001 is not particularly interesting graphically: the combination of the detached thought bubble and the dress on the left side of the picture makes this seem quite unbalanced to my eye. And while the emotional dynamic pictured here might describe the experience of young Dermot Finn as he moved through the world and chatted up people in wide outfits, I bet he'll draw a different picture once he starts meeting folks in whom the breeding jones is running strong. Definitely a shirt for people of a very particular age.... [Bananaphone] Ha! I get it, women think with their heads and men with their penis. This goes doubly when both genders have their legs stuck together in a compressed state. Either way this design is utterly hilarious and I really think the sentiment is fresh, and it is an enjoyable tshirt for the public to observe. That's what I'd say if I was an idiot, but unfortunately this sort of thing doesn't really do it for me. Anyhow I doubt this is going to be reprinted any time soon, which is a great tragedy to those that can't be bothered going to any large mall with a joke tshirt shop for something pretty much the same. Since I am a mean bastard, check out the guys site. He hasn't listed this design in his portfolio which probably means he has a bit of sense. Wearing Your Mobile Phone Number Kit [Retired]
[Bananaphone] Would I want to be called randomly by the sort of people that would appreciate seeing this tshirt on a fellow human being? No. Lucky for me not only will my home phone not fit in 7 numbers, but my mobile phone number is 3 numbers over too. I guess I'll have to wait for another gimmicky excuse for tshirt "design" which seems to be a trend at the moment. I have gone on a rant about this before but allow me to summarise. I do not want to write on my tshirt, I do not want to wear a tshirt that I have to write on for it to be interesting, stop being lazy bastards and design stuff that is either interesting or that people want to wear. Presstube (Print) [Retired]
Of the three posters in designs 11-20, the Presstube print is the one that I think would be most interesting to see on a shirt. I think you'd run the flat part of the design on the left as close to the seam under the arm on that side as you could, and you'd wrap the right side of the design just slightly across the chin line and over a bit to the right. Maybe those four shotgun-shell thingiebobs would be nearly over the heart? The colors are a challenge (how many are there? nine? ten? I have too short an attention span to keep track), but the internal structure of the design is interesting: the numbers and density of the parts of the design that run up and to the right do a good job of balancing the greater design expanse to the bottom (which is coordinated by its own nice downward-slooping elements). Any attention paid to the micro aspects of the design seems to draw the eye down into a kind of locally stuck abyss, but the larger semi-structures tend to pull you back out. It'd make a modern-day select with the same sort of appeal as Let Our Veins Do The Talking, I think: not for everybody, but I bet it's sell through a smaller run as a $25 select. [Bananaphone] An early foray into wall print by Threadless. Today we have Naked And Angry instead, lucky us. Overall the print isn't too bad, it has alot going on, alot to enthrall the eye. However I think this design suffers alot from it's poor colour choices. The browns and browns and dark cremes don't do anything for me at all. I think it would have benefitted from more interesting colour choices to match the designs vibrant movement, rather than the desaturated colours that prominently feature in the composition. It would also be nice if the whole design had a purpose and visual interest, however much of the outlying work makes the repetition of elements more obvious and only seems to serve to add further context to the chaos in the upper left area. She Shoot [Retired] |
I haven't submitted any photos. I guess I don't want free money.
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