Simon Fell's profile

Archive of 1990's Digital Illustration work

Computer Arts magazine. August 1998
Here are some examples of my digital illustration work produced mainly for B2B magazines during the 1990's. The work was usually started in entry level 3d programs like KPT Bryce and Strata3D and was then put through multiple filters in Photoshop. The work is unique I think in putting a value on a distinctly Photoshop style, you could not produce this work any other way and it's not trying to imitate other materials (like paint, pastels or charcoal for instance) although the way Photoshop is set up it tries to push you in that direction simply by the way they have developed and named the filters.
Above: Who’s walking who?: Marketing Week magazine. 
Are businesses in charge of the move to e–commerce or is 
the agenda being set by specialist consultants and designers?
Above: Science parks: The Engineer magazine.
The development of businesses as offshoots of university based research.
Tendering: Microscope magazine. An icon for a regular feature in a computer trade magazine. The Feature covered news of contracts for computer networks currently up for tender.
Exit Santa - If, like me, you have mixed feelings about Christmas this might appeal to you. A personal Christmas card made as a 3D model in Bryce and processed in Photoshop with figures drawn in
Above: The Red Carpet Maze, Money Marketing magazine annual awards dinner programme cover.
The Engineer magazine: Measurement - the search for ways to accurately measure the performance of companies involved in manufacturing
Financial Times: Mobiles for the Masses:
The story was about the move towards lower cost mass-market mobile phones. The scene was made as a virtual 3D model in Bryce then exported for processing in Photoshop.
Archive of 1990's Digital Illustration work
Published:

Archive of 1990's Digital Illustration work

Digital illustrations from the 1990's by illustrator Simon Fell made in various entry level 3d programs and Adobe Photoshop

Published:

Creative Fields