Trademark 

45 creative works found

  • Like our stuff? Wear our shirt!

  • The icon you know and love… on a tee!

  • I’ve been meaning to snap these statues (on the corner of Bourke and Swanston Sts in Melbourne) for a while. My friend and I were wandering past them on the Thursday afternoon before Good Friday when I noticed that someone had put a party hat on one of them … gives them some extra colour I think. So, I took this with my friend’s ‘point and shoot’ digital camera, which means I wasn’t able to apply any depth of field like I wanted – but I did manage to work out how to turn the flash off – but I think it’s still okay. / This is now part of my series: Statues Melbourne __

  • ©Seth F.Weaver,Sr. 1988. This is a very quick sketch of one of my favorite comedians Jack Benny. I wonder how many of you kids remember him? I love the simplicity of this portrait. Thanks for looking Seth.

  • Skull & crossbones made up entirely of corporate logos. Was recently de-published as a tee-shirt design for legal reasons, but displaying here not for sale is AOK. Priceless…

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Cyclone’s History Cyclone was formed in the early 1890s, when Leonard Chambers entered into a partnership with William Thompson to manufacture beekeepers’ hives and accessories. They also imported and distributed queen bees, to improve the existing strain of Australian bees. In the mid 1890s, Chambers read a small advertisement in an issue of a US beekeepers’ journal that proclaimed the merits of a manually operated machine able to weave wire fencing directly onto previously erected fence posts. Envisaging the scope for such a fence in Australia, Chambers contacted the manufacturers, Lane Bros, who had established the Cyclone Fence Company in the United States. In 1898 the Cyclone Woven Wire Fence Company was established in Melbourne. Initially all the wire and pickets had to be imported from the United States as the Australian steel industry was non existent. By 1912 Cyclone was well established. Cyclone Pty Ltd was incorporated in 1914, just before World War I, soon afterwards the company, like many manufacturing businesses, experienced difficulties, particularly in acquiring supplies of raw materials. Deliveries of imported goods were extremely unreliable and the prices high – wire cost an exorbitant 7 pounds a ton. In 1925 the company changed its name to Cyclone Fence and Gate Company Pty Ltd, more accurately reflecting its principal business activities. It survived the 1930s Depression without trading at a loss and in 1937 secured the Australian agency for tubular scaffold fittings manufactured by London and Midland Steel Scaffolding Co. With World War II, Cyclone, with its expertise in the wire industry, was quickly requisitioned to provide supplies for military purposes. The wartime demands stretched the capabilities both of the company’s plants and personnel to their limit. Consequently, by the time peace was declared in 1945, Cyclone’s civilian trade had totally dropped off. Cyclone scaffolding was used in the construction of The Sydney Opera House.

  • This is the trademark for San Gabriele’s Horn, located in Georgetown, Tx. I went to visit a friend and do some promotion shots of the place he’s restored. He’s done an outstanding job on the place. / If you go to his website, and check out photos under demolition, you can see what this beautiful place looked like before he put his tender loving touch to it. / I had a great time visiting him in Texas, and shooting the accomplishments he’s made with the place. / As of right now he is incorporating some of the shots I shot into his website. / So if you’re ever in Texas and around Austin/Georgetown and need a place to stay, this place offers one of the best sunsets in Texas to shoot. You have a deck high above the trees to shoot from. / I’d have to say, this shot is one of the fav’s of mine that I shot of his place.

  • Tulips from Holland, Known all over the world. Camera: Konica Minolta DImage Z20 / No heavy Photoshop or other kind of imaging

  • Yeah, yeah, I know it’s not original, but I had to do one (I don’t mean a poo!)

  • Being part of the thick-black-plastic-specs army, I was inspired use it to represent me. Drew this with my favourite black marker and scanned it. I think it’ll look great on a tee!

  • Sorry, had to do one! / A slightly less abusive version here

  • Copyright, trademarks, registration marks, mine, mine, mine – get off! / I don’t think there is such thing as a ‘new’ idea, every idea or design has been done, in some way, before – we adapt what we see. Therefore; who ‘owns’ the ideas, designs and imagery? By-the-way, if you nick any of my ideas/designs I’ll sue you for everything you’ve got!... ;-)

  • A slightly less abusive version of this

  • Graphic design, illustrations, art, photography and stories depicting horror and the macabre featuring a grim and ghastly atmosphere created by the zombie artist (Z.A.)…. Ludwig Wolfsvein Von Zombie.

  • Introducing a series of images that I have spent most of this year working on as part of the Northside Creative Photography portfolio program. Like Night and Day explores the contrasts of activity between night and day on Sydney’s streets by presenting corresponding images in a number of locations. The portfolio consists of 9 frames in total.

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