Cancer Face Halloween Mask
This is a Halloween mask I did for a Stylus activity. It’s gross. Your mom will love it.
This is a Halloween mask I did for a Stylus activity. It’s gross. Your mom will love it.
– Where’s your hat, soldier?
– I, um, misplaced it. sir. And I’m actually cavalry, sir.
– Cavalry? Then where’s your horse, man?
– Uh, hmm you see, sir …
– Ungh, don’t tell me. I bet you’d lose your head too if it wasn’t attached to your shoulders.
This is a custom design for Christopher Bonnette’s Squealer paper toy. Since Halloween is coming up shortly, I thought I’d something to fit the theme. Live by the sword…
Anyway, here’s a low resolution version of the template. You can download a printable PDF here (about 1MB). For instructions on how to put it together visit Christopher’s site for a tutorial.
Thanks to Christopher, who put the thing to together and took the photo too.
Well, not entirely filthy. Just a regular “Happy Valentine’s Day!” for the most of you. Sincerely. Really.
And if you see yourself as worthy, treat yourself to the filthy valentine too.
This Valentines day card was done for the Stylus Art Collective’s “Filthy Valentines” challenge. You can find a printable PDF and emailable version of the card at Stylus blog along with the rest of the dirty, dirty Valentine’s day cards. Some of them are probably not safe for work…
… but shouldn’t you working instead of surfing anyways.
I was kindly asked if I could do green versions of my blue skull smileys for Unit 16 forums, so here they are. I’ve also noticed that the set was missing a few fairly basic ones so I added those too. They’re the last four of the sets.
And here are the new, green ones:
And, again, you can download both sets as a single zip-file. And again, of instant messengers they should work with at least MSN and Pidgin.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
It was brought to my knowledge that the smileys I posted earlier didn’t work with MSN messenger. Well, that wasn’t really a surprise, since I hadn’t even thought that they could be used that way too. But it gave me a push to work on them a little more – well, actually completely redoing them.
The problem with MSN was that it uses 19 px emoticons instead of the 16 px I’d done. That fit me fine, since I’d already thought of doing bigger versions of them, to get clearer expressions. And true enough, the extra 3 pixels make a big difference and the new ones were much easier to do too.
I don’t think I’ll go into any detail about the design process – so here’s the full set of the twenty emoticons:
Or you can download the whole set as a single zip-file too. Have fun and use however you see fit.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.