A sheet of stickers designed by C R to commemorate the 2018 Hackfest held at Red Hat in Boston.
The first of a series of banners designed by Ryan Gorley to promote the suite of free and open-source applications available to creatives.
This design was created for 2021 contributors to the Inkscape project. The original design can be found at: https://inkscape.org/~Faellopis/%E2%98%85home-office-uma-realidade-mais-presente Modifications were done by c.rogers, doctormo, and myself.
Derivative of: https://inkscape.org/~bryce/%E2%98%85inkscape-flat-logo-2-color-variant
Tavmjong Bah, Alex Valavanis, Bryce Harrington, and Martin Ownens having a discussion at the 2018 Inkscape Hackfest at the Boston Red Hat offices.
Alex Valavanis, Matthias Clasen, Martin Ownens, and Bryce Harrington preparing for a discussion at the 2018 Inkscape Hackfest at the Boston Red Hat offices.
Ryan Gorley presenting a mockup of a revised Inkscape website at the 2018 Hackfest held at the Red Hat's Boston offices.
Máirín Duffy teaching local students the basics of Inkscape at the 2018 Inkscape Hackfest at the Boston Red Hat offices.
This was a drawing exercise to create artwork for the Solus operating system. Aside from the screen contents, all created in Inkscape.
This is artwork for a 3 x 7 foot banner produced for one of my studio's clients. I produced concept sketches in Krita. The 3D components were generated in Blender by one of my partners, I was responsible for the remainder. Initial color correction was done in Darktable. Compositing was done in GIMP. Text, vector elements, and final print output were from Inkscape.
This is artwork for a 3 x 7 foot banner produced for one of my studio's clients. I produced concept sketches in Krita. The 3D components were generated in Blender by one of my partners, I was responsible for the remainder. Initial color correction was done in Darktable. Compositing was done in GIMP. Text, vector elements, and final print output were from Inkscape.