Showing posts with label truck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label truck. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Jettisoning Ballast

In an earlier post, I advocated the use of a load of hay to improve the weight characteristics of a gasser pickup, improving grip in the quarter mile. After the race, you don't really need to carry that load around, so...

9x18 inches, painted in watercolor.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Deep Sea Repair

Assessing the damage after a day at the racetrack.  With a little help.

11x13.75 inches, painted in watercolor.  Available for purchase at Daily Paintworks.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

The Primitive #5


"Scientists now believe that the post-apocalypse wasteland will be a mashup of Mad Max and One Million Years, B.C. They are recommending people take better care of themselves now, so they don't miss it."

Many years ago, I drew a Jeep FC with a suicide front end, but kept the engine under/inside the cab.  I thought it might be a good way for a welder or frame builder to showcase their skills without having an engine in the way.  Not the most brilliant scheme, I admit, but that's where this idea came from.

8x14 inches, painted in watercolor. Available at Daily Paintworks.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Surf Weirdos #10


The only valid reason to get the undercoating option.


10x10 inches, painted in watercolor.  Available at Daily Paintworks.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Beached Weirdos #5

It's funny, the stuff you find sometimes when walking along the beach. Most of it's pretty unremarkable.  Bits of agate, broken seashells, a starfish or two.  But once in a very great while, you spot something a little more... interesting.

7x20 inches, painted in watercolor.  Available at Daily Paintworks.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Marine Weirdos #11

Sea monster wrangling, the brand new hobby that's sweeping the seven seas.

Painted in watercolor, 12x14.5 inches.  Available here.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Truck Monster 3

Or, Attack of the 5 Foot Woman.

I find white painted trim, like grilles and bumpers, a little more difficult to render than chrome trim.  For chrome, you just paint the sky in the upper surfaces, and the ground in the lower surfaces. (This is a gross oversimplification, but it gets the point across.)  But white bumpers and trim require a subtler approach.  you have to balance the need to convey depth against the color of the bumper.  Go too far with the light reflection from the sand and you'll wind up with a yellow bumper.  Use too much blue from the sky over that yellow, and you've got some ugly green color.  Over rendering can lead to fuzzy edges, which are not so good for representing a glossy painted surface.

How-ever, I believe older trucks, like this Ford, look more truck-like with the trim painted.  There's a utilitarian feel to painted trim that chrome lacks.  Chrome is fine for the car, which, for some people, serves as a badge of status and identity.  It's basically bling, or a silk tie.  Trucks, on the other hand, were traditionally built and bought to do work, and chrome does not enhance payload capacity or stump pulling power.

Don't misunderstand me, I love chrome.  The lack of chrome on modern cars is partly why they're mostly boring to look at.   But if you want to emphasize the working side of a vehicle,  less chrome does the job nicely.

10x16 inches, painted in watercolor.  Available at Daily Paintworks.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Surf Weirdos #9


 Cruising back to the beach at a leisurely pace.  No rush, no fancy stunts.  Just the wind and the salt spray in your face.


I'm mostly happy with this piece, though maybe the '59 Caddy tail light is a bit much,  especially since it's partially obscured.

10.5x12 inches, painted in watercolor.  Available at Daily Paintworks.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Sea Monster Repair


"Not everyone who owns and operates a sea monster is a mad scientist or super villain. A growing number of ordinary people have taken up sea monstering as a hobby. Since most of these enthusiasts are building their briny beasts on a budget, they generally start with a derelict vehicle bought for cheap, and save their cash for the tentacle drives and cyborg brainpans, which are difficult to scratchbuild with found parts. The results can be interesting, if not exactly pants-wettingly terrifying. Most hobbyists don't mind the lack of a fear factor, and say they're not in it to take over the world."



We'll see.

 6.5x9 inches, painted in watercolor.  Available here.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

The View From Here

"The view from up here is phenomenal!  Now, how do I get down?  Now I think about it, how the hell did I get up here?  This doesn't exactly look like an off road vehicle."

For my first Toyota painting, I went to the mid '60's and got a Stout, which I lowered a bit. Then, I put it on top of a stone plinth for no reason. And then I painted the girl's hair flowing upward; again, for no apparent reason. Such is the fickle wackiness of the creative process.

About 7.5x11.5 inches, painted in watercolor. Available at Daily Paintworks.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Space Weirdos #2

"Roger that, Houston.  We have stage 2 separation."

Or, if you prefer, you can supply your own pithy remark about the International Space Station.

Painted in oil on a 6x14 inch panel.  It's available for purchase on Daily Paintworks.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Space Weirdos

To go boldly where no Weirdo has gone before!

Maybe they're looking for those joyriding spaghetti creatures.

6x6inches, oil on panel.  Sold.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Marine Weirdos #9

It's Sea Monster Salvage And Repair to the rescue!

Painted in oil on a 6x12 panel.  Available on Daily Paintworks.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Marine Weirdos 7

"I don't remember seeing tentacles and bugeyes as options in the sales literature.  They must be aftermarket items."

Painted in oil on a 6x9 panel.  Available on Daily Paintworks.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Marine Weirdos #6

Is your diabolical engine of destruction run down, damaged, or in desperate need of routine  maintenance?  Is it making people soil themselves with laughter, rather than terror? Is your iron grip on civilized society slipping like a worn out clutch?  Call Sea Monster Salvage and Repair. They'll have your mechanical beast back on its tentacles in no time.

And they make house calls.

6x10 inches, painted in oil.  Available here.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Marine Weirdos 5


Choose Loch Ness Movers for all your overseas shipping needs.  Just make sure all your packages are watertight and fully insured against a possible impromptu sea monster battle or attempted apocalypse.



Painted in oil on an 8x8 panel.  Available for purchase here.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Surf Weirdos #1

Not sure how to describe this one, or even where the idea came from.  I'm sure I could have picked a more streamlined car for this idea, but would that make it less weird?  Is there a sliding scale for the "land vehicle being used as a surfboard" idea?  Would a 1960 Plymouth convertible with big fins riding the surf be less strange than a 1966 Dodge A100 van?  Or is it all the same once you decide to put a car in the ocean?

Painted in oil on a 8x8 panel.  Available at Daily Paintworks.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Marine Weirdos #4

No strange, mustachioed sea creatures were harmed in the making of this painting.  In fact, he probably gets better benefits than you.

8x8 inches, oil on panel.  Available on Daily Paintworks.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Joyrider From Outer Space 3

Lately, more and more people have had their cars stolen by what they describe as "green spaghetti creatures".  These creatures target older vehicles, mostly mild fifties customs.  They are experts in hotwiring, and are able to circumvent nearly any alarm system or anti theft device made today.  Most of the cars are recovered one to three hundred miles away, though one was found in Antarctica, and another may have been spotted on the moon.

Keep an eye out, be aware, and protect yourself and your car from the spaghetti creatures.


Painted in oil on a 6x9 panel.  Available on Daily Paintworks.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Beached Weirdos #2

More suspicious doings at the beach.  Just what's going on out there?

6x6 inches, painted in oil on panel.  available for purchase at Daily Paintworks.