Saturday, October 16, 2010
Richie Records T-Shirts
Here's a way to pick up a non - bootleg Hawk Krall shirt. I did this design for Richie Records years ago and they finally printed up some sweet shirts.
Richie Records is one of Philadelphia's last remaining stongholds of actual punk rock, related projects being Clockcleaner, Kurt Vile, the Homostupids, Violent Students, and Music For Your Methlab, Philly's best radio show that has sadly come to an end.
These guys have given me some terrific work over the years including this infamous cover of the Violent Students LP which is still one of my favorites.
Buy a shirt here-
testostertunes.blogspot.com
Read an interview here-
terminal-boredom.com
Friday, October 15, 2010
Bootleg Hawk Krall Hot Dog Shirts!
Honestly, if I saw my hot dog paintings on some all-over-print oversized ghetto t-shirt in chinatown I would be sort of pissed but also kind of psyched, and probably even buy one. What I find perplexing is a seemingly legit Detroit clothing company doing it.. I mean.. come on, you're too lazy to just do your own lettering?
Don't Buy These.
Down With Detroit Apparel
Looks like they took them down from the site. But I wonder if there's still a warehouse full of these somewhere???
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Cheap Eats
Illustration for Philadelphia Magazine cheap eats issue. About Lawyers and Hockey players who are opening up delis and hot dog stands.
A Connecticut Hot Dog Tour
Recently finished this DVD cover for a fantastic new documentary about Connecticut hot dogs. The main artwork is actually pretty large for me, somewhere around 3 feet wide.
Connecticut hot dog joints are chock full of amazing old lettering which helped make the art a blast to do. Mark (the filmmaker) provided me with some awesome reference photos.
In some crazy cross promotion madness, we also featured a few of the places from the documentary in my weekly hot dog column on Serious Eats, which might have been sketchy if they weren't some of the most legendary hot dog joints in the country. Also helps that the film is basically a labor of love that Mark has funded all by himself, so I was happy to help out.
The history of Super Duper Weenie actually goes back to a John Baeder, a fantastic superrealist / pop art painter and one of my favorites.Current Super Duper owner Gary Zimola saw the original truck in a book of Baeder paintings, and with the artist's help tracked down the truck, bought it, and turned it into an operating hot dog truck, and eventually a brick and mortar restaurant.
Baeder is known mostly for his diner paintings of the late 70's but is still going strong documenting hot dog stands and taco trucks all over the country. Check them out at Johnbaeder.com.
Read the full posts on Serious Eats-
A Connecticut Hot Dog Tour: Blackie's Hot Dogs
A Connecticut Hot Dog Tour: Capitol Lunch
A Connecticut Hot Dog Tour: Super Duper Weenie
A Connecticut Hot Dog Tour: Rawley's and Top Dog
There are prints available of the DVD artwork that you can buy directly from the filmmaker at CToriginals.com. For $29 you get an 11x14 giclee print (printed by Silicon Gallery fine arts, same folks that do all my prints) and a copy of the DVD.
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