alphabetical animation Archives - MobiSpirit MobiSpirit Tue, 04 Jun 2019 10:38:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Artist Illustrates Alphabet Using Your Favorite ’90s Toys https://mobispirit.com/artist-illustrates-alphabet-using-your-favorite-90s-toys/ Fri, 07 Jun 2019 13:40:13 +0000 https://mobispirit.com/?p=12687 Philadelphia-based artist and illustrator Noah Camp has made a name for himself with amazing 3D lettering and typography works that have landed him gigs with the likes of FOX, BBC, Entertainment Weekly and many others. When he is not working with high-profile companies, however, Camp creates fun illustrations that he shares with his social media […]

The post Artist Illustrates Alphabet Using Your Favorite ’90s Toys appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>
Philadelphia-based artist and illustrator Noah Camp has made a name for himself with amazing 3D lettering and typography works that have landed him gigs with the likes of FOX, BBC, Entertainment Weekly and many others. When he is not working with high-profile companies, however, Camp creates fun illustrations that he shares with his social media followers. His latest project: alphabet inspired by your favorite ’90s toys.

In a series of works, titled “90s Toypography,” Camp mixes nostalgia with his love for typography, and shapes toys into letters. What makes his effort really impressive is that each toy-letter is inspired by the iconic pop culture work which name starts with that letter. For example, J is made out of numerous Jenga bricks while letter N is made to look like a Nintendo Entertainment System console.

“It’s time to dig out your best pair of JNCOs, put your crystal Pepsi on ice, and join me on a trip down memory lane,” says Camp on his website. “36 Days of Type 2019 is all about your favorite childhood toys from the 90s. ’90s Toypography’ is going to make you nostalgic for a time when Blockbuster was alive, Sun-In was all the rage, and hacky sack was cool.”

Check out “90s Toypography” photo and video works below.

View this post on Instagram

K is for Koosh Ball⠀ 90s TOYpography⠀ ⠀ The Koosh Ball, the crazy looking ball once described as a "cross between a porcupine and a bowl of Jell-O,” is made of of more than 2000 rubber filaments. Scott Stillinger was inspired to invent the Koosh in 1986 when he was having trouble teaching his two young kids how to play catch.⠀ ⠀ Stillinger showed a prototype of the ball made of rubber bands to his brother-in-law, Mark Button, who’d worked in marketing at Mattel. The men—and their wives—were confident enough in the product to quit their jobs and start a toy company called OddzOn Products. Stillinger built the machine that would make the balls and operated it out of a barn near his house.⠀ ⠀ The media made fun of the Koosh at first, thinking it would flop. But in the end, those reactions didn’t matter much. The Koosh ball hit shelves in 1987, and by 1988, the ball was a Christmastime bestseller. The next year, it was in 14,000 toy stores across the country and available in 20 countries around the world. ⠀ ⠀ I loved Koosh for being the inside-the-house playing ball, even though my parents didn’t know this. I loved them for juggling, playing indoor basketball, and for lots of complicated games my brothers and I concocted with totally arbitrary rules. ⠀ ⠀ @36daysoftype #36days_k #36daysoftype06 #36daysoftype #90stoypography #koosh #hasbro #36days_Adobe #contest⠀ ⠀ #3dtype #typography #3dillustration #cinema4d #36daysoftype_adobe #retrogaming #vintage #90s #retro #oldschool #90skid #90skids #1990s #nostalgia #90svintage #90snostalgia #childhoodtoys #toy #toys #toycollector #boardgames #memorylane

A post shared by 3D TYPE & ILLUSTRATION (@noahcampdesign) on

The post Artist Illustrates Alphabet Using Your Favorite ’90s Toys appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>
Amazing Alphabetical Animations By Albert Oriol https://mobispirit.com/amazing-alphabetical-animations-by-albert-oriol/ Sun, 26 May 2019 14:47:10 +0000 https://mobispirit.com/?p=11981 Freelance motion designer Albert Oriol recently took up the popular 36 Days of Type challenge – a yearly open call for various artists to bring letters and numbers to life. Oriol contacted 36 fellow creatives to design alphabet and numbers 1-9 based on their own style. “I contacted 36 designers and illustrators with the idea […]

The post Amazing Alphabetical Animations By Albert Oriol appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>
Freelance motion designer Albert Oriol recently took up the popular 36 Days of Type challenge – a yearly open call for various artists to bring letters and numbers to life. Oriol contacted 36 fellow creatives to design alphabet and numbers 1-9 based on their own style.

“I contacted 36 designers and illustrators with the idea of animating a unique letter/number from each artist. The goal was to carry out a worldwide collaboration with 36 artists. I also wanted to challenge myself to try out different animation styles that I don’t usually get a chance to work on,” he wrote on Instagram.

Oriol’s alphabetical animations features a wide variety of designs and the project became an instant success with more than 1.5k followers that started following Oriol’s Instagram since he posted this artwork.

The post Amazing Alphabetical Animations By Albert Oriol appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>
ersion="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> alphabetical animation Archives - MobiSpirit MobiSpirit Tue, 04 Jun 2019 10:38:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Artist Illustrates Alphabet Using Your Favorite ’90s Toys https://mobispirit.com/artist-illustrates-alphabet-using-your-favorite-90s-toys/ Fri, 07 Jun 2019 13:40:13 +0000 https://mobispirit.com/?p=12687 Philadelphia-based artist and illustrator Noah Camp has made a name for himself with amazing 3D lettering and typography works that have landed him gigs with the likes of FOX, BBC, Entertainment Weekly and many others. When he is not working with high-profile companies, however, Camp creates fun illustrations that he shares with his social media […]

The post Artist Illustrates Alphabet Using Your Favorite ’90s Toys appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>
Philadelphia-based artist and illustrator Noah Camp has made a name for himself with amazing 3D lettering and typography works that have landed him gigs with the likes of FOX, BBC, Entertainment Weekly and many others. When he is not working with high-profile companies, however, Camp creates fun illustrations that he shares with his social media followers. His latest project: alphabet inspired by your favorite ’90s toys.

In a series of works, titled “90s Toypography,” Camp mixes nostalgia with his love for typography, and shapes toys into letters. What makes his effort really impressive is that each toy-letter is inspired by the iconic pop culture work which name starts with that letter. For example, J is made out of numerous Jenga bricks while letter N is made to look like a Nintendo Entertainment System console.

“It’s time to dig out your best pair of JNCOs, put your crystal Pepsi on ice, and join me on a trip down memory lane,” says Camp on his website. “36 Days of Type 2019 is all about your favorite childhood toys from the 90s. ’90s Toypography’ is going to make you nostalgic for a time when Blockbuster was alive, Sun-In was all the rage, and hacky sack was cool.”

Check out “90s Toypography” photo and video works below.

View this post on Instagram

K is for Koosh Ball⠀ 90s TOYpography⠀ ⠀ The Koosh Ball, the crazy looking ball once described as a "cross between a porcupine and a bowl of Jell-O,” is made of of more than 2000 rubber filaments. Scott Stillinger was inspired to invent the Koosh in 1986 when he was having trouble teaching his two young kids how to play catch.⠀ ⠀ Stillinger showed a prototype of the ball made of rubber bands to his brother-in-law, Mark Button, who’d worked in marketing at Mattel. The men—and their wives—were confident enough in the product to quit their jobs and start a toy company called OddzOn Products. Stillinger built the machine that would make the balls and operated it out of a barn near his house.⠀ ⠀ The media made fun of the Koosh at first, thinking it would flop. But in the end, those reactions didn’t matter much. The Koosh ball hit shelves in 1987, and by 1988, the ball was a Christmastime bestseller. The next year, it was in 14,000 toy stores across the country and available in 20 countries around the world. ⠀ ⠀ I loved Koosh for being the inside-the-house playing ball, even though my parents didn’t know this. I loved them for juggling, playing indoor basketball, and for lots of complicated games my brothers and I concocted with totally arbitrary rules. ⠀ ⠀ @36daysoftype #36days_k #36daysoftype06 #36daysoftype #90stoypography #koosh #hasbro #36days_Adobe #contest⠀ ⠀ #3dtype #typography #3dillustration #cinema4d #36daysoftype_adobe #retrogaming #vintage #90s #retro #oldschool #90skid #90skids #1990s #nostalgia #90svintage #90snostalgia #childhoodtoys #toy #toys #toycollector #boardgames #memorylane

A post shared by 3D TYPE & ILLUSTRATION (@noahcampdesign) on

The post Artist Illustrates Alphabet Using Your Favorite ’90s Toys appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>
Amazing Alphabetical Animations By Albert Oriol https://mobispirit.com/amazing-alphabetical-animations-by-albert-oriol/ Sun, 26 May 2019 14:47:10 +0000 https://mobispirit.com/?p=11981 Freelance motion designer Albert Oriol recently took up the popular 36 Days of Type challenge – a yearly open call for various artists to bring letters and numbers to life. Oriol contacted 36 fellow creatives to design alphabet and numbers 1-9 based on their own style. “I contacted 36 designers and illustrators with the idea […]

The post Amazing Alphabetical Animations By Albert Oriol appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>
Freelance motion designer Albert Oriol recently took up the popular 36 Days of Type challenge – a yearly open call for various artists to bring letters and numbers to life. Oriol contacted 36 fellow creatives to design alphabet and numbers 1-9 based on their own style.

“I contacted 36 designers and illustrators with the idea of animating a unique letter/number from each artist. The goal was to carry out a worldwide collaboration with 36 artists. I also wanted to challenge myself to try out different animation styles that I don’t usually get a chance to work on,” he wrote on Instagram.

Oriol’s alphabetical animations features a wide variety of designs and the project became an instant success with more than 1.5k followers that started following Oriol’s Instagram since he posted this artwork.

The post Amazing Alphabetical Animations By Albert Oriol appeared first on MobiSpirit.

]]>