Archive for the ‘Flash from the Past’ Category

Sophistikitten’s Skirt-O-Matic interactive Flash skirt design tool

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

The Skirt-o-Matic brings you your perfect skirt, made exactly how you want it. You build your skirt, we make it!

The basic Skirt-o-Matic skirt is a fully lined pencil skirt with a waist band, four darts front and back (eight in total), a choice of three vent styles at the back and is 26 inches in length. There is an 8 inch invisible zip on the left-hand side of the skirt with a button closure on the waistband.

Sophistikitten's Skirt-o-Matic title design by Ian Marsden

Sophistikitten's Skirt-o-Matic title design by Ian Marsden

How to use the Skirt-o-Matic

Use the buttons on the illustration above to work out exactly what features you want on your skirt, then order the features below. It’s that simple!

You will have a skirt that is customised just for you.

Go to Sophistikitten’s Website!

The main Sophistikitten's Skirt-o-Matic  interactive Flash tool

The main Sophistikitten's Skirt-o-Matic interactive Flash tool

It was a lot of fun to design the Skirt-O-Matic interactive flash design tool for Sophistikitten.

The background graphic with the buttons etc was designed by Proletkult Graphik by the way.
A fine London-based design outfit.

Sophistikitten’s Skirt-O-Matic interactive Flash skirt design tool

Cartoon from 1998 – 50 Years Mövenpick by Ian Marsden

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

From the Marsden Archives:

Cartoon Illustration 50 Years Mövenpick by Ian Marsden

This is a cartoon commissioned by Urs Kneubühl for Mövenpickles Magazine, the internal publication for the Mövenpick corporation.

Urs Kneubühl was a wonderful person to work for and I would like to count him to my personal friends.

The concept was to have a party with 50 scoops of the fantastic Mövenpick ice-cream flavors. The seagull on top of the mound if ice-cream stems from the fact that ‘Möve’ means seagull in German.

I used a sketch of my own daughter Joanna for the little baby – she was 1 year old right around the time I drew this cartoon.

Pen and Ink on Paper – colored with aquarell watercolors and colored pencils.

Cartoon from 1998 – 50 Years Mövenpick by Ian Marsden

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson were not gay after all….(Karikatur & Cartoon Museum Basel)

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

This is an ‘old’ cartoon (from around 1991 or so I would guess), when I had definitely not quite found my own style yet.

This was intended for Playboy Magazine, and as one can see in this example, I was trying way too hard to make it look like the already existing cartoon art in the magazine, and failing in my opinion.

(The original artwork for this, is in the collection of the Karikatur & Cartoon Museum Basel, Switzerland)

The back story: I am a huge fan of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes novels and short stories and have been since early adolescence.

In the early nineties my girlfriend at the time always suggested that the two bachelors living together at 221 B Baker street were obviously a gay couple. I strongly disagreed (Not that there’s anything wrong with that) – and hence this is my rebuttal I came up with. It never got selected nor published (and I am quite happy about this actually, looking at it now).

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson most decidedly NOT gay, after all.

A back story regarding Playboy cartoons: Many years later, as my work started to show a more identifyable style I started submitting cartoons to Playboy again. This time I received a very positive reaction from Michelle Urry, the cartoon editor at Playboy, who is a marvellous, classy lady who I am very honored to have met. (I read with sadness in 2006 that she had unfortunately passed away)

We corresponded for quite a while and I even had a meeting with Mrs. Urry at the Playboy HQ in New York, which struck me as a very ‘Austin Powers’ kind of place – just as I had hoped and imagined. In the end Mr. Hefner himself gave the thumbs down on my cartoons being published in the magazine. I was somewhat upset certainly, especially because Mrs. Urry was endorsing my addition to the list of Playboy cartoonists, but such is life.

Among Mad Magazine and the New Yorker, Playboy was definitely on my top 3 list of places where I always dreamed of publishing my drawings. Since the last negative reply seemed somewhat final, I haven’t submitted anything anymore since then.

(Cartoon von Ian D. Marsden: Das Original ist im Besitz des Karikaturen & Cartoon Museum Basel, Schweiz)

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson were not gay after all….(Karikatur & Cartoon Museum Basel)

Flash from the past – Part 298362

Friday, August 10th, 2007

Here is a scan of a VISA card poster I illustrated back in the late eighties… One of the first major assignments I received, shortly after moving into my very first own studio. I drew a series of full-page newspaper ads for the same campaign as well, but I don’t seem to have any remaining tearsheets or copies. Oh well…

What is kind of interesting about this piece, is that it was drawn with black india ink on Marker Paper and colored with Edding Graphic Artists Markers. On this piece I opted against using acrylics and airbrushes for some reason. There were of course no computers worth mentioning back then – well, I might have had a Commodore 64 humming away somewhere in my studio at the time, come to think of it, but nothing you could have used for graphics or illustration purposes – and certainly no Photoshop or the likes….

And if you made a mistake, that was always a major problem….

Visa Card Poster

Flash from the past – Part 298362

1999 – Göla Cartoon Illustration on Music Scene Cover by Ian Marsden

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

From the Marsden Archive:

Music Scene Cover with Göla

The cover of music scene magazine Nr. 1 February/March 1999 featuring Göla as the king of Swiss Rock Music on the cover. Illustration by Ian D. Marsden
Also featured in the background are Dieter Meier and Boris Blank of the wonderful band Yello, George Michael, Mariah Carey, Alannis Morissette, Cher and Bono.

Titelblatt von MusicScene (Das Schweizer Musikmagazin) Nr. 1 von Februar/März 1999 mit Göla als König der Schweizer Musikszene. Illustration von Ian D. Marsden

1999 – Göla Cartoon Illustration on Music Scene Cover by Ian Marsden