Showing posts with label spider-man. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spider-man. Show all posts

8.08.2011

★ Sporty Spider-Man ★

Sporty Spider-Man by Joe D!
Sporty Spider-Man, a photo by Joe D! on Flickr.
Via Flickr:
This design features a more down-to-earth look for the ol' Webhead. A light zip-up jacket and track pants are paired with lace-up gloves and boots. The laces work really well with the web motif and the padded webbing on the jacket and hood are strong enough visually that a spider logo isn't necessary. This makes for a light and quick Spider-Man with a parkour and free running influence, as well as drawing inspiration from cafe racer motorcycle jackets, the Bride's yellow jumpsuit from Kill Bill, '80s break dancer's, athletic sportswear, and classic super-hero design.


For the sake of disclosure, the laces were from an earlier design of a co-worker, Oren Schott's Spider-man, but he dropped them on his final version, so I picked them up. Check out his awesome ongoing webcomic here.

★ Tech Spider-Man ★

Tech Spider-Man by Joe D!
Tech Spider-Man, a photo by Joe D! on Flickr.
Via Flickr:
Another of my redesigns for Project Rooftop's Spider-Man Contest. I went for a Tron inspired high-tech look. Glowing piping, armor, and chest emblem, plated effect on the blue section. The negative space of the red armor blocks are recall the traditional webbing pattern.

8.07.2011

★ Dieter Rams' Spider-Man ★

Dieter Rams' Spider-Man by Joe D!
Dieter Rams' Spider-Man, a photo by Joe D! on Flickr.
Via Flickr:
Yet another submission for Project:Rooftop's Spider-man Redesign, so if you're keeping count, that's Golden-Age Spider-Man and Home-made Spider-Man, and Hipster Spider-Man.

The premise behind this concept is "What would it look like if Dieter Rams designed a Spider-Man costume?" , and while I'm not about to say that I can pull it off as well as ol' Dieter could, I could rip him off at least as well as Apple can. I gave him just two levels of detail, the red glossy hexagon pattern and the dark, dark, blue pattern. I would have gone for wood veneer and brushed aluminum, or black glass and white plastic, but Spidey would've been immobile. The eye elements have been replaced by a red visor helmet, though I kept a hint of the eye socket shape. I kept the original spider logo, since under this premise, I'm saying Paul Rand did it.

8.04.2011

★ "Does Whatever a Hipster Can" ★

Hipster Spider-Man, a photo by Joe D! on Flickr.



Via Flickr:
The next submission for Project:Rooftop's Spider-man Redesign, joining Golden-Age Spider-Man and Home-made Spider-Man.

Facts: Peter Parker is a scrawny, dorky, 20-something in NYC that putzes around all day with a camera being poor and acts like his life is "soooooo" tough. He has emotionally distant parents, periodically finds himself in a dumpster and in an upcoming storyline, he complains that all of New York is stealing his style.

Ipso facto: Peter Park is a hipster

BONUS
What he's wearing: Stuff he got from this one vintage thrift store, you've probably never heard of it.

7.18.2011

★ Project:Rooftop Spider-man Redesign ★

Via Flickr:
Project : Rooftop announced another contest last week, and I already have a few ideas for this one. I've already done a Spider-Man redesign last year when P:R took a bit of a vacation, and I'm sure I have a few more ideas more up my sleeve.

This concept was based on how Spider-Man (and most of Marvel's characters) is a silver-age character. Characters that get their powers from science (GAMMA RAYS!) instead of magic (CRAP FROM EGYPT!) and of course, the litany of personal problems that all characters have had since then. Since today's Peter Parker is growing up and no longer the angst ridden teenager, I thought it might be nice to see what he'd be like in older, vintage duds, trying to inspire the next generation of heroes like he was inspired by the generation before him. So he's a little more mature, can easily be cheerful and even patriotic out in the daylight, but can be dark and pulp noir-y at night for when he meets up with a cowardly, superstitious lot. Spidey's always been honest and truthful, and perhaps a little bit naive, so I think he fits well with a little bit of Golden Age flair.

2.25.2010

★ Spider-Man Redesign (Update: Now with 100% More Kraven) ★

Though Project:Rooftop seems to have just started up again, I'm still going through with the submission for the fan started Spider-Man & Villain Redesign contest. I've just finished good ol' Spidey, with the villain coming up this weekend. (Update, see below)

Spider-Man Composite

The premise behind this is that all the components are readily available to a high school kid. It always bothered me how Peter could whip up a Spider-Man costume over night. This was especially evident in the first film, when one day he's in a poorly constructed wrestling costume, and the next he's in a professionally made spandex costume with rubber webbing and a honeycomb pattern. This all looks beautiful, but a nerd with no fashion sense pulling this out of nowhere at the last moment seemed like a big stretch to me.*

So to rectify that problem, I've decided a costume where everything is commercially available from things a high school nerd would have access to. Places like Target or Amazon.

This consists of:

Hoodie, jeans, gloves, and a ski mask & cup googles. All readily available. I couldn't see Peter making all the line work for the full web pattern (at least at first, Reed Richards or someone with technology/money/skill could always give him the classic costume later) but a kid sharpieing in a giant spider on a hoodie? That seems doable. I wasn't going to have the pattern on the ski mask, but its just so damned iconic, I needed to have it. He's just not Spider-Man without it.

Protective gear, helmet, shin guards, motocross chest guard, and obligatory athletic cup. The idea of a teenage geek fighting crime in a concrete jungle without something to at least help with the inevitable scrapes and bruises.

Web shooters. These are gauntlets originally designed to hold shotgun shells. Here they house the web fluid. Paired with carpal tunnel gloves, which have a pocket on the inside of the wrist, usually for a splint, but with the splint removed, make an excellent pocket for the shooters themselves. Conductive thread on the middle and ring fingers of the gloves let Peter's trigger the device without it going off every damn time something touches it (this is the same science behind why the iPhone only works with your fingers, and not a stylus). Perhaps Peter set it the trigger is set to his specific genetically enhanced Spider-Man biometrics, so no one else but him could use it.

Last but not least, Gillies. Irish dancing shoes. I was looking for something for him to wear that was thin enough for his powers to work through, but not something as simple as socks. Something that will hold up better. A ballerina friend of mine suggested these, thin leather shoes perfect for Spider-Man. (Thanks Erin)

Costume can be worn with hood up and zipped for full effect, or down and unzipped for a more casual look. Everything here could fit in a backpack for easy transport/hiding.

So ta-dah, let me know what you think in the comments.

*I'm aware the whole idea of getting spider powers from a bite is a big stretch in and of itself, but that's the whole conceit of the plot. Magic fashion powers, however, are not part of the package.

*Update* KRAVEN!

Kraven Redesign

This one has far less explanation than Spidey, simply, this is a darker interpretation of Kraven. He has tattoos of every animal he's ever hunted, (notice how the lion tattoo references the classic, but somewhat hokey, vest) with a special place reserved for our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man.

Also, kickass Lemmy style manscaping.

I wish I had time to paint it up like I did for Ol' Webhead, but I just didn't have time. I do have a whole lineup of a brand new Sinister Six, so maybe I'll re-upload this when I'm done the others.