Tag: etsy

  • This is a chord…

    This is a chord…

    Hand crafted design!

    I was never a punk (always a metalhead), but I still appreciate the aesthetic and the music. The Damned, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Talking Head, Killing Joke – all good. There is a case for the punk ideal being the springboard for the new wave of British heavy metal, from which Iron Maiden sprang and made the world whole. But that’s for another blog post.

    When punk first started to take hold in London, a fanzine called Sideburn needed to fill a page in its first edition, so the co-founder (and fan of The Stranglers) Tony Moon drew the illustration below. It captures what I see as the punk attitude – anyone can have a go. Whether you will be good or successful or happy is another matter, but at least you tried.

    Original ‘This is a chord’ artwork by Tony Moon from Sideburn #1.

    It’s a wonderful mindset to have and one I wish I had embraced earlier in life. Ah well.

    With the need to start a business to bring in money since there isn’t a lot of suitable work around, I started Heath Way Prints in January 2025. Inspiration for designs isn’t a problem; finding how to transfer the idea onto a physical thing was the issue. Thank goodness for the University of YouTube.

    Taking inspiration from Tony Moon and my love of puns and maths, I realised that there are other definitions of ‘chord’. A chord is a line that crosses a circle’s circumference twice. Any triangle can be enclosed within a circle, so the three sides of such a triangle are chords. So, three chords form a triangle.

    I drew out a version of Moon’s original with this in mind.

    I tried to keep the lettering consistent with the original, but also had to bear in mind that the shape of the printing space on a t-shirt is squarer than the fanzine pages.

    All I had to do now was transfer this to a t-shirt and use a print-on-demand service to sell the t-shirts. Easy.

    Well, not so easy. I used the photo (photo because I don’t have access to a scanner) of my original to try out a t-shirt design using Gelato (the Print on Demand partner I had decided to use). The image was less than good. The white of the photo background was included in the image and it looked bad.

    I used Inkscape to remove the background. I followed a video by Daisy Multifacetica, and was able to change the colour of the text as well. So I had the option of black, white or any other colour. Really depends on the t-shirt colour.

    The black-on-white colour option is fine, as is the white on black. But there is a colour scheme that is synonymous with punk – black and pink on yellow.

    Designed by Jamie Reid, the cover of the Sex Pistols’ debut is a striking graphic and a popular colour choice in punk and punk-adjacent work. So I’ll do the same.

    I used the website schemecolor.com to get the correct pink – French Fuscia – and the hex code so I can get the right shade. The yellow isn’t really something I can control, since I am limited by what Gelato offer. Luckily, the yellow of their t-shirts is close to the yellow on the original album.

    Once I had a selection of colours I could then go to Gelato and design the t-shirt.

    In order to have a chance of selling, I need good pictures of the design in place. Luckily, Canva (another online design site) has the facility to add a design to images of models so shoppers can see how the t-shirt looks when it’s being worn. I did a few, because Etsy allows you to add 10 images and a video to the listing.

    The featured image at the top of the blog is one photo. They have a range of ages, ethnicities and genders to choose from.

    I made a montage video of the prepared images, which you can see on the listing on Etsy.

  • Etsy shop

    Etsy shop

    I set up an Etsy shop to sell t shirts some time ago, but I don’t think I’ve given it enough attention. I’ve certainly not blogged about it. There’s a lot of stuff to learn, designing the shirts is the least of it.

    My initial idea for designs was to use old patent images from guitars, jet engines and other tech. It took a while to find how to remove background from the pictures so that the prints didn’t have a huge area of white. This would look crap and my t shirts wouldn’t sell.

    I found Inkscape to be the easiest app for this. Luckily there’s YouTube videos that show how to do this; the first one I found was in Spanish, which I don’t know (apart from una cerveza, por favor) which confused me, but then I found the same woman’s English version. Hurrah!

    There’s a list of peripherals needed for the Etsy shop. I used Canva to design a logo, which I can put in the back of the neck of the t shirts. Then a banner; this had to wait until I’d made some t shirt designs to populate the banner with and learned how to make mock-ups. Again, Canva was the app for that.

    Logo for Heath Way Prints online shop
    Logo for the online shop. I tried to keep it simple and functional.

    I spent a chunk of today changing up the logo to make a rotating gif. I’d done this sort of thing with a beer logo so this was a bit easier than it might have been1. Still took me a couple of hours because I’m only about 100 hours into my Blender learning.

    Spinning beer logo, complete with shiny edges.

    I took some colour advice from Mrs S and we decided a green background would be good.

    Spinning logo on a green background.

    Then I uploaded it to Etsy, only to discover that the logo won’t be animated. Bums. Still, I had a decent purple still image instead, which I’ve used for the shop logo.

    I had searched for print-on-demand providers, these are companies who will print t-shirts for you as and when they are ordered. I signed up to Gelato, who seemed fine. Other POD suppliers are available and have a different range of items that can be ordered. Not just T-shirts, but sweatshirts, romper suits, hoodies, wall art, mugs, hats and other stuff.

    I may do a post on how to get from design to t-shirt and into Etsy, but I may have stretched your patience already. Anyway, the link to the shop is below, and I will do a post about the design of some of the t-shirts.

    https://www.etsy.com/shop/HeathWayPrints?ref=seller-platform-mcnav

    1. I followed a tutorial by Polyfjord, which laid out the steps very nicely. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zthvZvw-yJE ↩︎