Product Showcase: 72 Pins

bigcartel:

Modern day video games meet their 8-bit bizarro-versions with the NES art project known as 72 Pins. These NEStalgia cartridges are your favorite modern games re-imagined as retro Nintendo versions on actual working old-school NES cartridges. Featured on the Time Magazine holiday gift guide, you can learn the project’s full history in this VentureBeat article.

Check out all of the NEStalgia cartridges here: 72pins.bigcartel.com

Happy 26th Birthday old friend!

Happy 26th Birthday old friend!

Sale at 72Pins!
From now until Friday 2/24 @4pm, enter any of the codes below during checkout and you can pick up some awesome retro NEStalgia art for as little as $11.20 per cart!
Use code “BUY2” and get 20% off 2 carts
Use code “BUY3” and get 25% off 3 carts
Use code “BUY4” and get 30% off 4 carts

Sale at 72Pins!

From now until Friday 2/24 @4pm, enter any of the codes below during checkout and you can pick up some awesome retro NEStalgia art for as little as $11.20 per cart!

Use code “BUY2” and get 20% off 2 carts

Use code “BUY3” and get 25% off 3 carts

Use code “BUY4” and get 30% off 4 carts

War… War never changes.

The wait is finally over! Fallout carts are available now from artist Nick Robalik

Rather than attempt to explain just how much work went into creating this beautiful artwork, check out Nick’s behind the scenes look at the creative process. 

Available now @72Pins

nickwillcutyou: This was a fantasically fun project for the great folks at 72pins. Ron Workman and I got to talking about what would be cool to do that was in line with some of the painted covers featured on NES-era carts, and Fallout came up immediately as a favorite we shared and a cart he’d wanted to see since the very beginning of 72pins.


Once we figured out the general idea, 72pins Creative Director Pauline Acalin got on board and we worked out the concept based on a super-quick sketch (the first WIP screenshot above).

I tried to stick in a couple easily recognizable references: Nuka-Cola billboard and vending machine, the character on the crater edge decked out in a standard Vault-Tec jumpsuit, hangin’ with his canine companion. The initial plan was something much simpler, but as I worked on it, the image became more and more complex and layered - if anything deserves some extra detail love, it’s the post-apocalyptic world of Fallout.

The logo was sketched by hand, scanned in, cleaned up and tweaked some more with Photoshop & a Wacom tablet, then finished off in Illustrator to create an easily-scalable vector image…mostly because there’s plans to create a couple different sizes of art prints - the original artwork itself is about 22” wide, so we’ll be able to get a nice big print out there for sale!

I did a tiny bit of color tweaking in Photoshop to give the illustration that otherworldly, heavily-contaminated-by-radiation glow, though most of the piece was created in ArtRage, which I highly recommend checking out for a to do digital art that feels a bit more like working with traditional media and isn’t loaded down with tons of bells & whistles that can get in the way of just straight-up drawing with a tablet. It also has the best damned digital rulers in any program I’ve ever used. Like, actual rulers you can just plop down on the canvas. Craziness!

Okay, that’s enough outta me. See the final cart on the 72pins website, and find purchasing information here.

Thanks! There’s more to come…