Airbrush style
Our latest style offers a hyper real airbrushed look, remeniscent of 1980's posters and contemporary fantasy comics. Immensely flattering and great fun, this style moves beyond pop art.
How we work with you to create your Airbrush style picture
Step 1 - The photo
The first step will be for us to take a look at your photo and make sure we can work with it. For the best results we need to work from a clear, well lit and above all in focus photo.
Please bear in mind that as a basic rule, the better the photo we receive, the better the end result will be. As the artist is working only from the photo and needs to be able to zoom in on it to find the detail, it is very important that the shot is clear and in focus. As a guide, if you are unable to clearly see the colour of the person's eyes, then the shot is probably not suitable.
A shot with the person's head and shoulders taking up most of the frame is really ideal. Do remember that the portrait is about the person, rather than the situation they are in, so rather boring head on shots work far better than action shots.
As the portrait will hang on your wall for many years to come, it's worth taking time to get the right photo for the artist to work from! See examples of the sort of photo we need to create the best possible portrait.
Step 2 - Composition and colours
Once we have a photo we can work with, we will then move on to address the issue of composition and colours.
Composition
This is essentially about where the head sits within the canvas. To help decide on the composition of the picture we will send back a number of crops of your photo for you to consider. Some will be close crops, concentrating very much on the face, with others showing the full face and more background.
Colours
This style works well with a single bold background colour, but any neutral colour that sits well with the more natural colours of the face will also look good. As a starting point you can let us know what you feel would fit in with your tastes and interior.
When you've decided on the composition and colours you would like to see, we ask for a 50% downpayment and our artist starts work.
Step 3 - The portrait
About 2 weeks or so later, we would then email you back a first draft of the picture, using the colours you have chosen, but also showing you how it would look using some other colour combinations. This gives you the opportunity to feedback to us and to decide on the picture that you really want, before anything is printed.
These pictures are finished as a dye sublimation print on canvas. This process gives you a wonderful and very contemporary matt finish with the grain of the canvas showing through slightly. This means no sheen to distract the viewer from the image and looks fantastic when it's just stretched around a wooden frame and hung on the wall. Only when you are completely happy with the portrait is it then framed according to your request, packed up and despatched to you.
In all the process should take about 4 weeks.
Which size canvas should you choose?
It is worth bearing in mind that a little bit of scale does suit these portraits. With the Airbrush style portraits, a bigger picture allows the artist to go into finer detail resulting in a much richer portrait.
Because the artwork is created by an illustrator who works digitally and the canvas is then printed, the bulk of the cost for us, is the creative development (which remains the same for either a small or large portrait) rather than the material cost of the canvas and stretcher bars. For this reason the bigger canvases can in a way be though of as better value. If you look at the table below you can see how a small jump in price, gets you a huge leap in size.
Our recommended size in this style is 70cm x 70cm or above.
Prices for Airbrush style portraits
Click here to see our Sale Prices!
Request a no-obligation quote
Read more about our Portrait service
Ordering process
Why choose us?
Customer testimonials
Portrait price guide
Buy a Gift Voucher
Gallery of portrait styles
Framing options
Exhibitions
Finding the right photo
Watch us interviewed on the BBC (3 mins)
Back to gallery
|