Huge thread of cutaways of various military aircraft and vehicles from Italian site Aerei Militari.
Curtis Sayers
Tell us about your background?
I live in Newton, which is just outside of Boston. I took art classes at Hofstra University but actually majored in English. After school I got interested in illustration and design while working at an ad agency, so I took a lot of classes at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan. I started working as a graphic designer for high-tech companies about 15 years ago, and this allowed me to create technical illustration in-house and begin to build a portfolio. I decided to focus on illustration about five years ago and that’s the core part of my work now.
Are you a freelancer or in-house?
I freelance out of a home studio.
Software of choice?
I use Illustrator, Photoshop, and Luxology’s modo for 3d work.
Favorite clients/jobs?
Being an Air Force brat, I’ve enjoyed some military-themed projects for clients like Raytheon and Agility Logistics. I’ve also recently completed some projects in the renewable energy industry, which is very satisfying. Overall, clients that provide solid art direction but allow some freedom to create images that have marketing appeal are ideal.
Any advice for illustrators just starting out?
Always try to create your very best work. Of all the illustration disciplines, ours is perhaps the most demanding as far as accuracy is concerned, so be a perfectionist. Digital tools have allowed us to get lazy to some degree, so be methodical in your execution and scrutinize your work. The results will show for it.
When appropriate, use some creative license in how you approach a project to help it accomplish its communication goals. Sometimes people starting out are too rigid with how they execute an image and they don’t allow themselves to play with the subject matter and compose something that really resonates as a piece of art.
Curtis Sayers’ work can be found at Studio Sayers.
Technical Illustrators.org Flickr Group
For those of you on Flickr, add your work to the official Technical Illustrators.org Flickr Group.
It’ll show up in the fancy widget in our sidebar, and from time to time we’ll feature work posted to the pool on the blog.
Techie Exploded Illustration Shirts
Regardless of your pants status, shoes and a shirt is always required for service. Why not wear a shirt that shows off your techie side with these exploded isometric tees!
Illustrator Garry Booth sells these shirts silkscreened with exploded parts diagrams of an Apple iPhone, Mac 128K, XBox 360 and the Nintendo Wii.
Lego Minifig Patent
…or technically a Design which protects the shape/form of a product rather than a apparatus or process. From way back in 1979, so you know someone was hunched over these with their Rapidograph for hours.
[via Make & @grantimahara]