Motor label restoration
Posted: Tue May 24, 2016 8:07 am
Yet again, I woke up after only 2 hours of sleep, and was wide awake. This sucks.
At least it's an excuse to sit and stare at the computer screen for another 5 hours until the family gets up.
I have multiple motors that are in decent shape except for the labels, being stained, faded, scraped, etc.
Occasionally you see repro labels on the Bay or something like that, but they are never the ones I need. After talking to several people that have done them in the past and looking elsewhere online, I couldn't find anyone that wanted to do labels.
So I decided to do my own. I've been an amateur artist for about 30 years now, so it's mainly a matter of finding the time to do it...I guess 2 AM is as good of a time as any...
I started by carefully removing the labels from a Tri Sonic and green label Sonic. Then I scanned them at a stupid high resolution and imported them into the graphic editing program I use. The labels looked a lot worse off after scanning than I realized.
The Tri Sonic was the first one I worked on. I do almost everything freehand, redrawing lines, replacing missing parts, etc. The only exception - that you can see on the green Sonic, is when I can use geometric tools to make perfect circles, etc.
The colors on the original scans look a lot more faded than they really are...but that's easy to fix in the program.
The Tri Sonic...before and after ... and remember they are in much higher resolution on my pc for printing. This label, start to finish, took about 16 hours of work over the last month or so to get it tweaked just the way I wanted it...zoomed in to go pixel by pixel to get it right. The only issue left is that my printer color is way off from the graphic program color, so I'll have to print a bunch in different hues until I find the right one.
The green Sonic is what I was working on in the middle of the night (and WAY too early morning). It's about half way done.
At least it's an excuse to sit and stare at the computer screen for another 5 hours until the family gets up.
I have multiple motors that are in decent shape except for the labels, being stained, faded, scraped, etc.
Occasionally you see repro labels on the Bay or something like that, but they are never the ones I need. After talking to several people that have done them in the past and looking elsewhere online, I couldn't find anyone that wanted to do labels.
So I decided to do my own. I've been an amateur artist for about 30 years now, so it's mainly a matter of finding the time to do it...I guess 2 AM is as good of a time as any...
I started by carefully removing the labels from a Tri Sonic and green label Sonic. Then I scanned them at a stupid high resolution and imported them into the graphic editing program I use. The labels looked a lot worse off after scanning than I realized.
The Tri Sonic was the first one I worked on. I do almost everything freehand, redrawing lines, replacing missing parts, etc. The only exception - that you can see on the green Sonic, is when I can use geometric tools to make perfect circles, etc.
The colors on the original scans look a lot more faded than they really are...but that's easy to fix in the program.
The Tri Sonic...before and after ... and remember they are in much higher resolution on my pc for printing. This label, start to finish, took about 16 hours of work over the last month or so to get it tweaked just the way I wanted it...zoomed in to go pixel by pixel to get it right. The only issue left is that my printer color is way off from the graphic program color, so I'll have to print a bunch in different hues until I find the right one.
The green Sonic is what I was working on in the middle of the night (and WAY too early morning). It's about half way done.