Evil Puppethead Products | |
In the winter of 1991, I attended my first Action Sport Retailer trade show in San Diego and I was introduced to the fashion business. It was an exciting time in the industry, the clothing was wild and the music was groundbreaking. And there was a lot of interest in small companies and independent designers. I saw young artists selling unconventional garments and funky printed t-shirts. I remember thinking: I wanna do this! |
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In 1992, I began my company Evil Puppethead Products. The starting point and the center piece of the line was the Evil Puppethead jug head hat. | |
The next step was to create a series of t-shirts. My design concept tied evil and 666 into my images. The 666 print became my best selling design for the next 2 years. Other designers were inserting their names into well known logos and pop culture references. |
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I though it would be fun to do a mash up with comic book covers and created a group of fictitous super heros and villians.
| > I updated the Evil Comic book art in 2009 using Maya and Photoshop |
Also as part of this line, I screen printed my 666 design on gas station overalls, and put an "Evil" name tag over the left pocket. The coveralls were a big hit! |
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Evil Puppethead Products V.2 | |
After the sucess of my first trade show I put a large portion of my profits into building up for the next one. I was really happy with my trade show concept. My booth and pre-show print advertising were tied around the images of the liquid evil girl. The joke being, toxic waste wouldn't have a bad rap if it had an attractive spokesmodel. |
> I updated the Liquid Evil Girl art in 2009 using Maya and Photoshop |
My product line grew as I designed more styles of custom hats. |
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Kungfu Threads | |
My third year I went in a different direction and designed a brand new line. I used almost my entire production budget to make high quality samples and hire kick-ass artists for my designs: Will Pace and a young Meats Meir. I printed on ringer tees and althetic jerseys. I designed a jacket, a pair of jeans, record bag backpack and turntable slip covers. My trade show booth was minimal, focusing my marketing money on advertising in industry magazines. My promotional swag included Kungfoo stickers and a big box of mixed tapes by my freind DJ Mechanized. |
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Karate Elvis Concept by me Artwork commissioned from Will Pace |
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Storm Trooper Concept by me Art by Meats Meir |
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Disco Skates Concept by me Artwork by Will Pace |
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Shaft Concept by me Artwork was an awesome hand drawn half tone pattern drawn by Will Pace |
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Evil Knievel super-dooper disco jacket Concept and design by me | |
As a small business owner, it eventually got harder and harder to compete with large companies. Retailers became more interested in buying very deep in a few selected big fashion lines and a lot of the smaller designers got lost in the shuffle.
I had a blast while it lasted and learned lessons about business, marketing, and design I would carry into all of my future projects. |
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