Grime is a pop art style that was really popular in 2016 and 2017. It was frequently seen in music videos and artwork of many artists. One of the most notable, was Getter, a dubstep-trap producer who broke out into the EDM scene with his music video for his song "Headsplitter". This video certainly popularize the art-style, as after the video came out, an art trend surfaced that involved drawing over a photo of a person's face with slimey, gooey graphics. I had my hand in the Grime art space for a time, and this collection is my work to show for it!

This was for our annual Spring Catalog released back in April of this year; Our Cataog products get special treatment with a sleak video showcase on their PDP, (Product Display Page) to show off some more extra details and styles! This video was edited in Adobe Premier Pro using some counter scaling techniques as well as jumpcuts for a bit more rawness; also some special lumetri color correction to bring the image out more!

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Same deal with this one as the previous product, edited down with jumpcuts and less scaling automation this time, but more contrast and color work. This one was also for the Spring 2025 Catalog featurette!

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This was a sort of 'Emergency edit', as I call it! Someone in my department approached me about a 3-pack of colored skate wax blocks that needed to be in the same image for the purpose of the product to be shown well, yet we only had individual shots provided by the vendor. I got to work and placed them all into the same image and added a generic white-grey background. I then created some shadows using the paint brush and eraser tools to create a lighting effect on a smooth surface, and did some shading work on the wax blocks based on where they were in relation to the imaginary light source and the other wax blocks!

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This skate deck was a case where we did not have the physical deck on hand to photograph and needed an image for it. All I had to go off of was an amature photo taken from one of our store employees who reported it had the wrong image online. Being the design of the deck was fairly simple to replicate, I used stock images of the generic female bathroom character logo, and placed it onto an image of one of our generic gold foil decks in the same way it was designed on the actual deck, then finally, placed the finished work onto a generic white-grey background!

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This deck was a similar situation to the previous one, where the actual deck we were selling in stores was not reflecting what we had promoted online; Using the reference photo from a store employee, I downloaded some stock images like a holographic foil, and the mascot from the vendor, 'Alien Workshop'. I was able to put this image together in about 20 minutes!

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