Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

July 06, 2023

A Proposal for the State Flag of Minnesota

There is an ongoing effort to get rid of the current flag of Minnesota. This is warranted. Several flags in the Union only consist of the state seal on a blue field, perhaps with some text added, which is neither distinct nor good-looking. At a glance, basically nothing sets the Minnesota flag apart from those of, say, Nebraska or Idaho. There are finer details, of course, but that belies the point: The finer details should not matter for a flag. It should be distinct at a glance from almost any other flag, and certainly from all other state or territorial flags within the same country.

Minnesota has long needed a new flag. Here is my proposal to replace it.

The grey outline is for visibility on a white background, not part of the design.

In the interest of full disclosure, I did submit a description of my design to the folks at Minnesotans For a Better Flag, the organization linked above. There are some striking designs included on their site (and some less good ones), the best of which is Rev. William Becker and Lee Herold's North Star Flag from 1989. I also greatly admire the ingenuity of John Palenschat's Loon Flag, even if I think it is a little too complicated for actual use.

Minnesotans For a Better Flag have not gotten back to me about my design, which probably means they aren't interested. Which is fine! I'm surely not the only other person who has submitted an idea, and they are very much allowed to not like mine. I still thought I would share my design here.

The flag is a tricolor in bright green, midnight indigo, and white. In the middle of the indigo stripe is a white roundel containing a 10-pointed star in indigo. Each element contains the following symbols:

Green stripe - representing the glow of the northern lights and Minnesota's luscious forests and prairies

Midnight indigo stripe - representing the night sky and the state's many lakes and rivers

White stripe - representing Minnesota's frigid winters

10-pointed star - standing for the Land of 10,000 lakes and representing L'Étoile du Nord; contained within the roundel, it somewhat resembles a compass or the eight-pointed star in the Capitol

As you may have been able to tell, the tricolor is supposed to represent two different images of nature in Minnesota. In one, the white functions as the icy ground below a dark, starred sky and a brilliant green aurora. The other works as a representation of the seasons, viewed from above: A dark river flows through the middle, and on either side is a shoreline in summer — the kind of gorgeous green that amazes this born-and-raised Texan every time he returns from a sabbatical down south — and one in winter — coated by all-consuming snow.

This color scheme would also be unique among U.S. state flags: Only Washington currently features green prominently, and it is a significantly darker shade. While many contain blue, none contain indigo. It is admittedly hard to consistently replicate one kind of purple across different applications, but this color leans much closer to navy blue than purple and is dark enough for most derivations from the "standard" indigo to not be too noticeable. While I could have used navy instead, giving the darkest color on the flag with a tinge of red lends it some distinctiveness and provides the slightest nod to the place purple has in our state's culture: Prince, some of our sports teams, and again the vibrant, multi-colored aurora. (Is that bit a stretch? Possibly, but it is an honest stretch.)

If there is one aspect of my design that I think is lacking, it is the lack of any nod to the Native Americans who have called Minnesota home. However, I ultimately decided that I could not do so; I am no expert in indigenous cultures, and any attempt at representing those cultures would likely have fallen flat. I am, in the end, a dumb white guy. And dumb white guys should know what they don't know.

This will not become the next flag of Minnesota, or even ever be considered for it. However, I feel the combination of simple, relevant symbols and bespoke, contrasting colors makes it a design that stands for Minnesota's many natural wonders. If our state ever does replace its flag, those are the qualities we should want in its successor.

October 27, 2022

2022 Minnesota Game Poster: Rutgers

This week's game poster leaves contemporary music and returns to the classic — specifically, one of the most important albums ever made, Black Sabbath by Black Sabbath.

Goldy takes the place of the woman on the cover, cloaked in black against an ominous backdrop. In this case, instead of Mapledurham Watermill on the Thames, the building across the water is the U of M's boathouse on the Mississippi. I've tried to avoid leaning into boat-, rowing-, or P.J. Fleck-related imagery with my posters unless I really need to fill a space, but I was having difficulty finding another building to put into the background here. The boathouse is near enough to water and trees to work in this spot, and it's on campus.

I took some liberties with the trees in the background, making their wood darker and more foreboding, as well as adding a combination of darkness and light fog to mask some of the imperfections along the ground. Because of how high the trees go, I added a faint glow around "Golden Gophers" at the top so it could still be read.

Originally, I wanted to use a retro version of Goldy, as a more feral-looking gopher might look more frightening. But it just wasn't working, mainly because I couldn't find a way of using something that looked like the old logo without just being the old logo. So I inserted the modern Goldy and made him a bit paler. Note his ears poking through the hood.

I feel rather proud of this one. It took some effort and turned out well, it was a bit less straightforward than just putting Goldy in the place of a famous musician, and it put a lot of Black Sabbath songs into my head while I drew. These are all positive things.

October 21, 2022

2022 Minnesota Game Poster: Penn State

For once, my Gophers game poster will take inspiration from a modern album — one that was released just this year, in fact: Big Thief's Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You.

First, I must say that I absolutely love Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You. I love Big Thief, but I especially love this record. Indie-interested people have probably come across it at this point, since Big Thief is far from an underground group, but if anyone hasn't listened to it yet and is interested in an eclectic mix of folk, country, and polished, effects-heavy rock with dashes of electronica, I cannot recommend the album any more highly. I do not hesitate to call it a 10 out of 10.

Anyway: This week's poster was made just in a sketchbook with a pencil and eraser. I touched up the picture I took with my phone's very basic editing effects, but that was the extent of my post-production.

The original album cover featured a small bear sitting on a log, playing guitar around a fire with an owl, another bird (a sparrow?) and a Tyrannosaurus Rex (or some other therapod). I couldn't think of an appropriate party of four to put around this fire, but I did decide the special talent Goldy could show off was spinning his head. His counterpart, the Nittany Lion, stands in amazement, fury, or some other unclear emotion. You can't find much depth of feeling in that face.

This isn't a great work of art or anything, and I never felt great about how to center the two mascots around the fire, but in general I am happy with what I made here. It was a fairly quick, easy, and fun drawing. If you stretch a bit, you can say there's a tie-in between the album and the game: There's a White Out at Beaver Stadium on Saturday, and it's an all white poster. There's the title and the area around State College, too. Maybe call this Goldy Nittany Mountain I Believe in You. Or maybe don't.

Previous posters can be found by clicking the Art label at the bottom of this post.

October 14, 2022

2022 Minnesota Game Poster: Illinois

After parodying a Bob Dylan album for the Purdue game, we're doing something more recent for this third poster of Minnesota's Big Ten schedule. However, since I am spiritually an old man, "more recent" means going all the way to 1970. Our basis: Curtis Mayfield's debut album, Curtis.

Goldy is dressed in Mayfield's gold pants and jacket, with a couple of beaded necklaces, a similarly beige shirt (but with Goldy's face on it rather than a paisley pattern), and of course a pair of sunglasses. He sits on a hill, staring off into the sunset. Behind him is Northrop Auditorium and a license plate that, instead of reading "CUTTY," says "GOLDY." The license plate is in the style of Minnesota plates from around 1970, a change from the yellow and black plate on the original cover. The date of this week's game, meanwhile, is in the top left corner where the Buddah Records emblem originally was.

The inspiration for this week's poster was... thinking Curtis is full of jams? Wanting an album with a prominent figure at its centerpiece, making for a convenient place to put Goldy? There was no specific reason to go this direction. It was just a convenient direction to take, with a great album to which to pay tribute. If you can find any connection here, it's that Mayfield is a prominent Chicago artist, and the Gophers are playing in the state of Illinois this weekend. (Never mind that Champaign is more than 2 hours away from Chicago.) It's just another fun project, one I'm glad I finished in time for the game.

Previous posters can be found by clicking the Art label at the bottom of this post.

September 29, 2022

2022 Minnesota Game Poster: Purdue

Last time around, I made something kind of stupid that didn't require a tremendous amount of effort. This time, though, I've made something kind of stupid that took a lot more effort. Behold, Goldy Gopher as Bob Dylan on the cover of 1966's Blonde on Blonde:

If there is any justification for this week's selection, it's that it's the homecoming game. After all, Bob Dylan is probably the most famous University of Minnesota participant. More than anything, it was an idea I just liked because it has an obvious place to put Goldy.

A few notes: I drew this all with a stylus in GIMP 2, using the ink tool. (That's how most of these will be made from here on out.) I kept Bob's scarf the same but changed his coat to maroon. There wasn't a perfect way to pull off the hair, but I think I basically got it right enough. The original cover features a photo that's out of focus. The way I tried to replicate that is by duplicating Goldy a couple times, and then blurring and offsetting the two new layers on top. They are mostly transparent in the final product, but the effect is most visible on the scarf and Goldy's eyes. The block M, as well as game information, is located in the top left corner, where Columbia's logo normally would be.

Previous posters can be found by clicking the Art label at the bottom of this post.

September 22, 2022

2022 Minnesota Game Poster: Michigan State

Last season, I made 13 game "posters" over the course of the Gophers' season: basically, a piece of art for every game, parodying a video game and at times involving the opposing team. Goldy was the star of each. I felt better about some than I did others, but in general, I felt happy with this project.

By the time the season was over, I already had ideas for another set of posters for 2022. This time, each one would parody a famous album cover, or at least the cover of an album I hold in high regard. However, I was not mentally ready for such a project. I was tired. I wanted to go places and see friends. More than usual, I needed the offseason. And even when I wanted to think about football, I wanted to work on ideas for posts before another big art project. I completed nearly the whole set of regular season posters last year during the summer. This time, I got a few ideas written down, but by the time it was time to start writing previews, I didn't do any posters.

I still wanted to do a few this year, though. I decided not long after the New Mexico State game that I could make time to make some for the conference schedule. Probably not a poster for all nine, but at least one for each of the biggest handful of games. (Specifically, Illinois, Rutgers, and Northwestern are most iffy.) Whatever I'm able to work out — in addition to all the writing and data work I do for the actual football, I do have a "real" job, a social life, and the occasional wish to not devote every second of my free time to football-related thoughts.

The first appropriately big game on the schedule to deserve a poster is this week's matchup with Michigan State. The initial album cover idea involved matching the chronological order of each game on the schedule with a corresponding album within a given artist's career. So, for example, the New Mexico State game would be an artist's first LP, the Western Illinois game would be a different artist's second, and so on. I won't be sticking to that pattern for however many posters I make, but I will do so for this one. There were plenty of classic records to go with Game No. 4, but I settled on Talking Heads' Remain in Light.

And you may say to yourself: My God! What have I done?

Now, Remain in Light's cover is more iconic and striking than it is pretty. My parody of it therefore contains no more beauty, and probably has less, considering the appearance of previous Goldy iterations. I decided to use different versions of Goldy in place of the band because it seemed more suitable than using different players, coaches, or Sparty. The bottom left Goldy, from the 1950s, is probably the one that most resembles the ground squirrel Goldy is based on, but he is hardly lovable. Other pictures, in counter-clockwise order, come from the 80s, 90s, and the current day. I desaturated the modern Goldy's photo and gave them all a maroon tint.

The style of the cover, being so primitive by today's design standards, is not that hard to replicate in any program with a square brush. (I used GIMP.) There wasn't an ideal letter in "Golden Gophers" to flip like the A's in "Talking Heads," so I just flipped the three A's in "at Michigan State" at the bottom. Because the text looks so small, it looks a bit like "vt Michigvn Stvte, which I accept.

December 27, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 13: West Virginia


Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

Nebraska

Maryland

Northwestern

Illinois

Iowa

Indiana

Wisconsin

In our Cactus Bowl poster, a parody of Pitfall!, Goldy swings from a giant saguaro cactus over a pit in the Sonoran Desert. In the distance are the McDowell Mountains, and below the ground lurks West Virginia's musket-wielding Mountaineer.

The version of Pitfall! I used as the base for the aesthetic was the ColecoVision port because it had a more vibrant color palette than the original Atari 2600 release, though I ended up not sticking strictly to said palette for the whole thing. The sprite designs, limited by the number of pixels the game could use, are simple and flawed. Rather than correct these imperfections, I decided to stay true to them in most cases. This is why Goldy's chest seemingly has a hole in it, as Pitfall Harry's sprite has the same issue.

Thank you to everyone who viewed these posters or even showed them to someone else. I don't know if a similar series will return for 2022, but I enjoyed putting it together this season.

November 26, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 12: Wisconsin

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

Nebraska

Maryland

Northwestern

Illinois

Iowa

Indiana

Our last regular-season game poster features Goldy in the place of the protagonist of Dig Dug, blowing up Bucky Badger with an air pump as he leaves the top of the tunnel. There are two white flowers and one large red one to indicate that this is Game 12. The high score is 185100, referencing the year of the University of Minnesota's founding (1851).

I originally made a larger version of this, with a full game map, but the interesting part of the art was always Goldy and Bucky. So while I've generally tried to mimic what I'm parodying as closely as possible, I decided to crop the design for aesthetic purposes. I threw a bit of snow on the ground because of what time of year it is, but like with the Illinois poster, it doesn't appear we'll actually get any snow in the Twin Cities before Saturday.

One thing I thought as I was making this one is that, in a way, its tone resembles old college football paraphernalia, where the home team is depicted enacting some comic violence upon the mascot of the visitors. This would usually be on a button or program. Considering some of the content of those, it's probably best that we don't revive that era. But there's a humor to the genre as a whole, and I'm fine momentarily embracing that in a harmless way before a major rivalry game.

Next week... Well, there is no next week, most likely. Chandler probably will not be able to throw together a poster in time for the Big Ten Championship, should Minnesota somehow reach it. But for the bowl game? We'll see about that.

November 18, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 11: Indiana

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

Nebraska

Maryland

Northwestern

Illinois

Iowa

In our poster for the Gophers' 11th game, Goldy (and P.J. Fleck) travel to Bloomington and meet Indiana head coach Tom Allen in front of the Sample Gates, located at the entrance to Indiana University's "Old Crescent." Allen greets his challengers with his program's mantra, "LEO."

The style is modeled on the "overworld" of the second generation of Pokémon games, whose Silver edition is perhaps the video game to which I have devoted more time than any other in my life — even granting how little I've played it since I was probably 12 years old. (NCAA Football 14 is probably its chief rival.) It didn't make sense to have Goldy as a trainer, since he's not human, so like Pikachu in Pokémon Yellow, he follows Fleck around. The building to the left is meant to represent Franklin Hall, home to Indiana's media school.

Though a battle scene might make more sense as a more overt homage to Pokémon games, I thought I had covered too similar a ground with my Iowa poster. I admit that this is among the simplest art I've made in this series, but I am fine with simplicity. Also, having visited the IU campus and found it quite nice, I wanted to pay tribute by portraying one of its landmarks.

Coming next week: a Border Battle poster to close the regulars.

November 11, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 10: Iowa

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

Nebraska

Maryland

Northwestern

Illinois

We've finally come to the first poster I made for this season of Gopher football, that for the Iowa game. Unlike other posters, this one isn't modeled on any particular game as much as a genre, specifically fighting games like Street Fighter and Tekken. Goldy and Herky face off on the field at Kinnick Stadium, with the lights shining down and the children's hospital in the background. Each mascot's health bar is in increments representing one win in the series history: 62 for Minnesota, 50 for Iowa. Floyd of Rosedale sits between each bar.

As I said in my original post for the Ohio State poster, I started working on this as something to share among a few friends. A couple of hours into my work, it became clear this was going to be a more expansive project, so I decided to use it for a different purpose and disseminate it to a wider audience. I'm quite proud of how it turned out. Though everything here is traced, doing so pixel-by-pixel to create something like this is a meticulous process. The pictures I found of Goldy and Herky I had to make into sprites. Each chairback in the stands I placed myself. I even made a pixelized Iowa flag to wave from the top of Kinnick's east stand. I put a tremendous amount of work into this, and I hope you find worth in it.

Next week, Goldy goes to Bloomington for Chandler's penultimate game poster of the regular season.

November 04, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 9: Illinois


Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

Nebraska

Maryland

Northwestern

My Gophers game poster this week is based on the title screen to The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past, one of the most beloved video games ever made. Instead of Hyrule Castle, though, the structure in the foreground is the Stone Arch Bridge in Minneapolis. The city's skyline is in the distance and reflected on the water instead of mountains. To reflect the transition into November, ice is beginning to form over the top of the Mississippi River, and the sky is a dreary grey. Meanwhile, Goldy's silhouetted face is in the clouds. The title itself, done in the style of the original font, features the state of Minnesota in place of the Triforce and an oar where Link's sword would be.

A friend to whom I showed this a few weeks early said this was my best poster. I'm not sure I agree, but I do feel good about it. My biggest regret is that Minnesota takes up too much space, obstructing the view of a skyline I tried to make look true to its inspiration. If you want a clear look at it, here you go.

I have nothing else to point out except that a month ago, when I finished this, I thought it would be colder in the Twin Cities by now. Certainly, I figured, it would have snowed once, right? Alas, that is not the case, and my poster looks a season ahead of schedule. It wasn't worth correcting at this point, both due to the time required during a busy week for me and because I like the way it looks just fine. At least my being wrong means that it will be nice at the game on Saturday.

Next week's poster is the one that started this whole project back in March, for the game against Iowa. Consider coming back here to see it.

October 28, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 8: Northwestern


Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

Nebraska

Maryland

In honor of Halloween, this week's Gophers game poster is based on the cover artwork for one of the most acclaimed horror video games of all-time, 1999's Silent Hill. Goldy Gopher takes the place of protagonist Harry Mason, staring off into the snowy Evanston night. (Disclaimer: It's not supposed to snow Saturday. Nor is it a night game.) In place of Harry's daughter, Cheryl, is Willie the Wildcat, who walks past the eerily glowing entrance to Ryan Field. P.J. Fleck's face can be seen where police officer Cybil Bennett's is on the original cover. In the fog is the ghostly image of Joseph Medill, the namesake of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. I've added branding in imitation of a PlayStation game's jewel case and the old Konami logo.

I don't know if this is my best game poster, but it is among my favorites. Like the Colorado poster, I made this with a drawing pad, tracing images as best I could to fit the style. Goldy is the best-looking object in the picture — vitally so, seeing as how he is the most prominent. I wanted him to look less like the modern Goldy and more like that from 1999, so I found old gameplay footage of an old NCAA Football game to trace over. This helped me get a three-dimensional-looking shading better than probably anything else I drew. Fleck and Medill look a little more "drawn" than I was hoping, but they each are significant improvements from where I started. I had to tone down the detailing to make sure they looked more feasibly like they were created on a computer in 1999.

Similar to Purdue Pete's cameo on the Purdue poster, maybe my favorite detail I threw in is Medill. It's just a dumb nod to all the Northwestern alumni in media who have been the subject of internet jokes beginning with "As a Medill grad...". I have no strong opinion on Medill grads, but I thought it would be a decent bit.

Now, to answer an important question: Is Ryan Field scary enough for a Silent Hill parody? Not really, no, unless wealthy suburbanites frighten you. Especially not this year, with Northwestern's shoddy play. The place is usually a haven for visiting fans. But the Wildcats have seen some weird peaks, and the height of their stadium's natural playing surface has been mythologized as helping even the odds against superior competition. Unfortunately, I couldn't find a way to work in the grass. But let it be known that I did want to include it.

With a game against Illinois next week, there will be an Illinois poster next week.

October 21, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 7: Maryland

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

Nebraska

In this week's game poster, it's a parody of Mario Kart, with Goldy speeding away from Testudo at the finish line. In the place of Lakitu is P.J. Fleck, brandishing an oar instead of waving a checkered flag. Minnesota's stadium is in the background.

For this one, I referred to different iterations in the Mario Kart series rather than using just one. The original uses an aesthetically unappealing double-box setup to display both the map and the player. That would not look good as a poster, so I instead used the map overlay that appears in future games. Though the simple backdrop is meant to resemble Mario Circuit, I based the track on the roads going around the stadium. The turn onto Oak Street from 6th Avenue in the northwest corner is a bit sharp, but a player could navigate it smartly by drifting.

I came to the idea when thinking of turtles in video games, to represent Testudo. Bowser was an obvious comparison. It might have been too obvious, but I thought basing the poster on Mario Kart rather than on one of the battles against Bowser in a core game was a workaround. While I used Bowser as the base for Testudo's sprite, I "painted" Goldy on top of Yoshi.

Come back next week to see a game poster befitting a game the day before Halloween.

October 14, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 6: Nebraska

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

Purdue

This week's poster is straightforward: It's the player selection screen from NBA Jam, but with players from the Gophers and Cornhuskers. The original hardwood backdrop is now turf, the teams are all from the Big Ten, and the basketball-related attributes are now for football. Each player's portrait is pixelated like in the actual game. Minnesota and Nebraska's logos are true to the era, with football-toting Goldy and the Tom Osborne-era "Huskers" script over the N.

I have only a couple of things to point out about my process here. The first is that Adrian Martinez has been so good that this week, I had to change the attributes I gave him in May, when I first finished the poster. I thought if I had to change anything, it would be because he played poorly enough to be benched. Instead, I had to bump his throwing and speed ratings to not look like a fool.

The second item is the concept of the ratings and how I imagined a two-on-two football video game looking. I thought of how backyard football games go and what the traits are you need in those: You have to run, you have to catch, and you might have to avoid being tackled and fumbling. Sometimes, you have a real quarterback, and sometimes you don't. Imagine Big Ten Jam (an incongruous pairing, I know — a game that is loudly fun and an organization that is stodgily self-important) as something like that: backyard football, but with superhuman leaping catches and over-the-top jukes. You can run the option or throw the ball. Most attributes are self-explanatory. We'll say strength determines how often a player fumbles or forces a fumble. Maybe Gus Johnson does commentary. I think that sounds alright.

Next week, Minnesota hosts Maryland, and you can once again expect a game poster in this space.

September 30, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 5: Purdue

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

Bowling Green

This week, the Gophers hit the road for the first time in Big Ten play. For our purposes, we'll imagine that the whole team has been crammed into the back of a van closely resembling that from the Sly Cooper series, with a maroon-and-gold paint job, the raccoon logos replaced with Gophers, and the ringed-tail flag changed to brown. As they roll into West Lafayette, the ominous likeness of Purdue Pete looks down upon them from the night sky.

I was going to reference the Sly Cooper series at some point as part of this project, as every game of the original trilogy ranks among my favorite video games. (Sly 2 might be my favorite game ever.) To imitate the Cooper Gang's van, I placed custom shapes over it in PowerPoint until I had a new, Minnesota-themed van. PowerPoint is where I made everything else on the poster as well, including an obscured depiction of the university gateway on the corner of Grant and State streets. This was an arduous process, but I think it turned out well. I hope Purdue Pete's ever-looming, terrifying presence — sort of like Clockwerk in the games — is as funny as I've thought it to be since adding it at the end.

With no game next week, there's no poster. But expect one in the days before Nebraska comes to town.

September 23, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 4: Bowling Green

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

Colorado

The inspiration for this week's poster is the classic arcade game Space Invaders. In place of the player's ship is Goldy's head, which is firing lasers at a horde of pixelized Bowling Green logos. With nine games to go entering this week, Goldy has nine lives. To imitate what a game looks like in a cabinet — where a layer of plexiglass sits above the screen — I added a faint glow around every sprite.

There isn't much to say about this one, as it was rather straightforward. As with Miami, there aren't a ton of interesting potential video game tie-ins with BGSU's mascot. As a result, I chose a game that can be used generically enough to fit for any opponent. Goldy's head doesn't quite match the proportions of the original ship because there was no way to make his two teeth look good in a sprite that's an odd number of pixels wide. The laser he shot is therefore off-center from his head, though it's far enough away that that should be imperceptible at a glance. I came around on the glow effect after a few weeks of looking at it; the version of the poster without the glow felt flat. Overall, I like the way the poster turned out.

Next week, Chandler will unveil his poster for the Purdue game.

September 16, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 3: Colorado

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

Miami (OH)

I have been looking forward to unveiling this week's poster for some time because of the many hours I put into it, what I learned trying a new method and aesthetic for this one, and how well I feel it turned out. While most video games I reference in this series are old enough for someone to be nostalgic for them, this week, we're parodying the cover of Red Dead Redemption 2. For the unaware, it is one of the most acclaimed games of the last decade, taking place in a serious of fictional states resembling the American West. One such state imitates Colorado. In place of protagonist John Marston in my poster is Goldy; instead of a gang of seven masked riders, there are five Minnesota football players.

Much of what is on this poster I made with a drawing tablet, which I purchased just for this purpose. I love the almost chiaroscuro shading in the game's art, and I was glad to find a tutorial on YouTube that helped me a bit with imitating it. The original picture of Goldy I traced actually features him in the Jerry Kill-era uniforms, but updating the design wasn't too difficult. In the sun, behind Goldy, there is supposed to be a mountain; however, when I placed him into the picture, the mountain was obscured. The sun and the ground I gave a more scuffed, "painted" look using different brushes in GIMP, combined with the smudge tool. For the drawings, I used the ink tool.

The five players are, from left to right: Chris Autman-Bell, Coney Durr, Tanner Morgan, Braelen Oliver, and Mohamed Ibrahim. Obviously, Ibrahim won't play against the Buffaloes or in any other game remaining in the season, but having worked on this for much of June and into early July, I frankly have put am not about to spend more time to replace him in the poster.

Come back next week for Chandler's Bowling Green game poster.

September 09, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 2: Miami (OH)

Click to enlarge.

Previous game posters:

Ohio State

This week's game poster stars Goldy in the place of Bo Jackson in Tecmo Bowl, spiking the ball after a touchdown. The stadium in the background is adjusted slightly to look more like the Gophers', and the referee is dressed like a Big Ten referee instead of an NFL one.

This one was relatively straightforward — it was one of the posters that took the least amount of time — but it had its own minor difficulties. It was hard to make Goldy look just right; as much as I tried to downsize his biceps from how absurdly large digital Bo's are, I could only do so much. So Goldy is a bit more buff than he is in real life. The colors are also a little more muted than I initially had them in order to better match the game's color palette.

And there was the simple difficulty of figuring out what this poster should be. There's little history and no animosity between Minnesota and Miami. The game is unlikely to be very close. There was no interesting way for Goldy to interact with Swoop the RedHawk. I could be accused of sidestepping the issue by not finding a Miami tie-in, but I'm fine with that. Everyone knows Tecmo Bowl. Unless the Gophers play with their food for a while or break some records, this game shouldn't be memorable for anyone. An essentially generic poster, then, is suitable.

Come back next week to see the poster for Minnesota's trip to Colorado.

September 01, 2021

2021 Minnesota Game Poster No. 1: Ohio State

Click to enlarge.

Since 2013, the Ohio State blog Eleven Warriors has had a running tradition during football season: For every game, graphic designer Walt Keys makes a game poster in his distinct style, featuring Brutus Buckeye in a scenario relevant to that week's opponent.

OSU meets Clemson? Keys recreates a Calvin and Hobbes strip. The Buckeyes travel to Texas for a matchup with TCU? Brutus rides into the sunset with a Horned Frog on a spit. Chase Young, "The Predator," is back for the Penn State game? A dreadlocked Brutus stands partially out of frame, pointing three lasers at the forehead of the Nittany Lion statue. Keys' posters — like the blog, as well as most Ohio State fans on the internet — can take an arrogant tone but are routinely clever and look universally cool.