| Tall Ships Art |
Feenixx plans
to publish a series of posters on sailing ships. This poster, Tall
Ships, shows the large contemporary sailing ships of the world. If
successful, it will be immediately followed up by "America's Tall
Ships," showing those that fly the U.S. flag. Then will come
"History of the Sailing Ship," "Sailing Warships" and "Sailing
Merchant Ships" and one on parts a sailing ship. There will
also be posters on modern ships - 20th Century Ocean Liners, US Navy
Warships, etc. There are several ways that a bunch of ships
can be shown and it is quite possible that different posters will
use different styles. The purpose of this page is to explore the
possibilities of our immediate need, "The Tall Ships"
We have defined the content of this posters - that is, which ships
are going to be shown. (Probably between 35 and 40). However we have
not yet decided how to show them and are open to suggestions. This
page explores some considerations and possibilities. |
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Introduction |
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With all their masts,
riggings, sails, and other details, the tall ships seem to be a
complex art job. That may not be the case. First, this is a job
which lends itself to CAD. There are only seven basic designs and
once they are created, they can be easily modified for individual
ships, which will vary in size, proportion, paint scheme, deck
equipment and rigging. We used this approach on our
International Airlines posters (picture 6) shown below. |
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Picture 1.
Traditional Painting |
| Figure 1 is
a traditional painting that captures the "feel" of a tall ship. It's
sails are filled with wind and bow cuts sharply through the water
churning up foam. These convey the feeling of movement and
thus the true spirit of the subject.. |
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Picture 2 T
raditional Profile view. |
| The Sails
behind the mast. This shows the rigging. This is an excellent
presentation for people interested in the details, but the technical
nature of the drawing fails to capture the excitement of the ship
under sail. |
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Picture 3 Modern Profile view.
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| The sails are in
front of masts. The billowing full sails better convey the "feel" of
the ship. |
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Picture 4 -
Merchant Sailing Ship Poster |
This is the only sailing ship
poster on the market today. It was published by an Italian company.
Note that the entire hull is shown, not just from waterline up as
are the profiles. This is an excellent approach for historic ships.
The artist solved an important problem, that of tonal separation.
The sails of historic ship were made of canvas and yellowed with
age, which the artist shows. They are enhanced by the tan
background.
Unfortunately this will not work with modern tall ships as
often their sails are mode of nylon or other synthetic material and
they are very white. The exception are the few historic ships that
do use traditional canvas sails. . . |
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Picture 5 - Aerial
Photograph |
| This breaks from the
traditional profile and show a more 3-dimensional view. |
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Picture. 6
International Airlines Poster
One of our posters. Note that the airplanes are shown in profile and
the common background. |
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Picture 7 - USAF
Strategic Bombers Poster |
| This is another of our
bomber posters. It was prepared in a CAD program and the CAD models
could be rotated, permitting all aircraft to be shown at the same
low angle. This revealed the all-important wing shape. The
finish work consisted of giving all the same lighting -
highlight and shadows are the same location as if they were will all
lit from a common light source. The images were on transparent
background. In the layout program, they were all sized to the same
scale and superimposed over a common sky background. This results in
the illusion that they are flying in formation. I consider this the
best airplane poster every published. |
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Picture 8 -
Traditional Sailing ship outlined. |
| This is figure 1 from
above, but almost all of the background has been removed. Note that
the water around the ship has been retained, especially the foam,
which suggests movement. This image was converted to TIF format and
the extract feature of Photoshop was used to create a transparent
background. |
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Picture 9 - Mockup
- Light Blue Background |
| A quick mockup was made
in InDesign, rubber stamping two copies of the image and
superimposing on a light blue background. The water looks very fake,
but this can be corrected. |
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Picture 10 - Mockup
- Dark Blue Background |
| Same as above, but
different color background. The dark blue works great with the foam
around the ship and certainly provides great tonal separation for
the sails. It makes a good color scheme, but is not without is
problems. There is no horizon. |
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Picture 11 - CVN69
- the Eisenhower. |
Changing perspective is
one way to solve the problem. However, this is much too high
an angle. That shown in picture 5 would work. This approach
would require art for the background. |
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These are the
considerations. We are open to suggestions |