Showing posts with label Graffiti Alphabet Letters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graffiti Alphabet Letters. Show all posts

Monday, July 12, 2010

Graffiti Alphabet Instructions


Graffiti Alphabet Letters

Heavy dot indicates starting point
Punctuation shift = tap once (Write to exit a shift mode.)

Saturday, July 3, 2010

How to Draw the Graffiti Alphabet Letters | New Graffiti

Drawing Graffiti Alphabet Letters

Graffiti alphabet letters can take a regular job or canvas and give it an urban twist, which allows the artist to stylize his words and give a unique meaning. Graffiti letters allows artists to put their spin on the style to help define their work from other artists. Graffiti letters often look stunning and complex, but most can be broken down into several simple steps.

Things You Need to prepare:
  • Pencil
  • Markers
6 Steps How to Draw Graffiti Alphabet Letters:
  1. Draw graffiti alphabet you want to write on your canvas with a pencil. Do not take anything fancy or bubble letters, just write a letter in the canvas you leave a big gap between private letters.
  2. Use a marker to go to the pencil line. This will be your primary color. Your base color is the color on the inside of your letters. You can make this as small or as large as you want.
  3. Draw additional layers with your bookmarks to your graffiti alphabet letters are big and fat looking and has filled the space between one another. Trace the outside of the letter with your bookmarks until they are as fat as you want them.
  4. Use a darker color than your base color to the shade side of your letter. Very light to go to the edge of your letter that you've just completed about a bookmark wide around the letters so that when you draw a line in your letter will stand in contrast line more than it will on the basis of color.
  5. Draw a line on your graffiti alphabet letters. Use colors that contrast with the basic colors so that the outline will be more prominent and make your letter seem to jump off the wall.
  6. Select the direction of light sources. The most common would be either the left or right to graffiti letters. Once you know where you want your light source, take a color darker than your base color (you can use a mixture of colors that you used previously or using a darker color) and interesting shadows over your papers. Add shadows by placing the dark lines along the edge opposite from the light source you. So, if you use the right as the light source, you want to add additional lines on all the left edge of each letter. You can make shadows longer or shorter depending on how the three dimensions of the letter you want appears. Project completion will have such a big bubble letters with contrasting colors that reflect the urban graffiti found in most cities.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Tips and Warnings How Tag Graffiti Alphabet

Graffiti Alphabet Letters A-Z

Tips and Warnings How Tag Graffiti Alphabet:
  1. Draw lightly so you can easily delete rows.
  2. Use the marker only after you have finished making sketches.
  3. Take your time and careful with your line thickness.
  4. Do not tag on the wall without first checking the local laws and get permission. There are many ways to express a legal graffiti art, so respectful and always get permission (preferably written) before practicing tagging private property.

Monday, June 21, 2010

37 Kinds Of Style Graffiti Alphabet

37 graffiti alphabet
37 Examples of different styles of graffiti alphabet letters a-z. Graffiti alphabets with 37 different colors. Comment if you like graffiti

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Graffiti Alphabet Taggings 'A-Z'


Graffiti alphabet taggings A-Z. Graffiti Alphabet Letters, design and style graffiti alphabet above you can use Write My Name In Graffiti. Via: New Graffiti

Friday, June 11, 2010

Monday, June 7, 2010

Different Types Of Alphabet Letters | Graffiti Fonts


Different types of alphabet letters. Graffiti Fonts. New Graffiti
alphabet is a set of standard letters - basic written symbols or graphemes - each of which roughly represents the phonemes in spoken language, both as it exists now or as in the past. There are other systems, such as logographies, in which each character represents a word, morpheme, or semantic unit, and syllabaries, in which each character represents a syllable. Letters are classified according to how they indicate vowels:
  • The same way as consonants, as in Greece (true alphabet)
  • Abbreviation of consonants, as in Hindi (abugida)
  • Not at all, as in Phoenician (alphabetical)
The word "alphabet" came into Middle English from Late Latin word Alphabetum, which in turn comes from the Ancient Greek Αλφάβητος Alphabetos, from alpha and beta, the two first letters of the Greek alphabet [1.] Alpha and beta in turn came from the two first letters of the Phoenician alphabet, and meant ox and house respectively. There are dozens of letters that are currently used, the most common are Latin, [2] derived from the first true alphabet, Greece. [3] [4] Most of them are composed of lines (linear writing); exceptions are Braille, fingerspelling (Sign language), and Morse code. Via: Alphabet