It's funny you should say that. I did some T-shirt designs for Levi's who wanted a line of generic superhero shirts. I did a series of five illustrations that told a quick story (basically a hero saving his space monkey from a villain and his horde of evil space monkeys) and each one would have been printed on a shirt. They worked by themselves too, but I explained that the story idea might make people buy the other shirts.
As you can probably guess, I got a kill fee and a ticket back to Austin. I heard they tried two other illustrators before scrapping the project entirely.
these two are great complimentary pieces, like goad's Get Up Kids posters. I really like the idea of posters working as a series. It'd be kind of cool to have posters be narrative like an ongoing saga. Sort of like the way a comic works, you lay them out in a chronological order and they tell a story.
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