Ok, I've got some progress to report today. First up: stickers! Why stickers? Well, I've got these spots on my bike where some reflective tape had been applied, and when I removed them, they revealed some of the surviving paint underneath. While it's pretty cool to get a small glimpse at what this bike used to look like, it stands out from the rust and patina too much in my opinion. I haven't mastered the art of "fauxtina" yet, so I'm thinking of covering up the sore spots with stickers. I was going to use some stickers I already had stored away, but they all look too bright and glossy to fit in with the rest of the bike. Fortunately, I'm an illustrator and graphic designer by trade, so I can just make my own stickers!
The first and worst spot I want to correct is the front of the headset. the red paint extends about 5 1/4 inches from top to bottom, and 3/4 inches wide. There's a total of about 2 inches of room between the tank halves, but even that isn't enough room for conventional sticker proportions. This would have to be a very tall and narrow sticker in order to cover up the paint. Fortunately, I have a plan.
View attachment 195058
To get some ideas, I decided to see what my bike (or a similar bike) would have looked like when new-ish. That's when I saw this photo of a similar bike with a long, narrow "Murray" badge between the headlights. I need my sticker to be a bit taller than this, but this helps with the dimensions.
View attachment 195062
Here's what I came up with: The sticker for the headset will be shaped similarly to the Murray badge pictured above, but instead of "Murray," I'll use my username instead. Not only will it help fill in the taller and possibly narrower proportions required for the sticker, but it'll provide me with a space to add my "signature." So far, I feel design #4 is the strongest, but there's still room for refinement.
On the same page, I tried coming up with ideas for the sticker on the chain guard (more on that in a moment,) as well as ideas for the custom headlight and tank insert. Those ideas might be better to explain once I have better photos of the materials I want to use and what sort of ideas and issues I'm trying to sort through.
View attachment 195050
The next spots I want to cover up with stickers are the large white spot on the chain guard and possibly the smaller spot on the tank. I want to place the name of the bike on the chain guard, since that's usually where the model name of most bikes is placed, like the "Meteor Flite" script that's already there. I also want something like a racing or sports-inspired sticker to cover up the spot on the tank, almost like some kid might've placed it there decades ago to personalize his bike with a nod to his favorite sport.
View attachment 195056View attachment 195057
Once I came up with the bike's name,
Shoestring, on Friday, I immediately got to work coming up with a design for a chain guard sticker. Here's the challenge with not just that sticker, but the others I'm designing for this bike as well: I don't want these stickers to look... too obvious. I don't want these stickers to look like brand new, fantasy stickers that I made up in 2022. I want them to look old, faded, wrinkled and brown, like they were all on the bike for decades while it sat inside a barn or out in a field somewhere. That also means I want the designs to look old, like something you might have found in a department store back in the 1960s/1970s.
So while that chain guard sticker will state the name of the bike, I don't want it to be obvious at first glance that that's the sole purpose of the sticker. I want it to look like a souvenir sticker that a kid might have received with some shoelaces he bought at a big chain shoe store and slapped on his bike to cover up a scratch or paint chip. That's why both rough designs say, "
I got my Shoestring at Pay Nothing Shoe Source." It also serves as a reference as to how I'm trying to "pay nothing" extra to build this bike.
I wanted the word "Shoestring" to be written using a single shoelace, so the only way to really do that was to write the word in cursive... I haven't written anything in cursive since I was in 5th grade nearly 20 years ago. Heck, my signature's not even really cursive; it's mostly stylized
print! So I had to look up what cursive letters even looked like, and... well apparently I forgot quite a bit of how to write in cursive, hence why my first attempts to write
Shoestring look so bad. I practically had to
sketch the word instead of
write it. It didn't help that there was more than one way to write a cursive "S" and "G." Still, I feel I did okay figuring out how to portray a cursive "Shoestring." There's still room to refine it, of course, but I at least have the gist of my idea down.
As for the sticker I want to throw on the tank, I was looking at old automotive racing stickers and old logos for the Super Bowl and Rose Bowl for inspiration. As I was browsing Google for inspiration and reference material, I had one of my favorite car shows,
Full Custom Garage, playing on the TV in the background. Ian Roussel was building a sort of "Great Depression period-piece" Model A Ford that looked like something one might have seen driving through The Dust Bowl. That got me thinking; "Super Bowl," "Rose Bowl," why not "
Dust Bowl?" It could be a fantasy sports-themed sticker, a reference to the history of Oklahoma (my home state,) and a reference to a period where loads of people had to make do with what they had to make ends meet. It felt like the perfect fantasy sticker to throw on a rusty bike that's all about working with what I have.
I immediately remembered a certain detail from Ken Burns' documentary on The Dust Bowl where the dust was so bad, families would place their plates and bowls upside-down on the dinner table to keep the dust and dirt from getting inside them until they were ready to eat. So, I used that detail as the foundation for my fantasy "Dust Bowl" sticker. The "MCMXXX" refers to the year, 1930, when The Dust Bowl began. On design #6, "MCMXXXVI" refers to 1936, the year when The Dust Bowl ended. Basically, designs 1-5 are supposed to be an upside-down bowl resting on top of a dinner table, with a checkerboard table cloth on designs 2-5, and dust piled over the bowl and table on designs 4 and 5. Design #6 is just an upside down bowl with "Dust Bowl" and 1936 in Roman numerals on top. I was thinking I'd put that sticker on the opposite side of the tank, if I decide that side needs a sticker. So far, I like design #5 best, but there's still room for improvement.
View attachment 195051
So those are the rough designs for my stickers, but now comes the really interesting part: how am I going to make them? First, I'll sketch some refined designs on paper, then take those designs and flesh them out and finalize them in Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator. I might deliberately fade the colors before I print them to make the next step look more convincing. I'll need to print the stickers using a laser printer. I don't own one myself, nor does anyone I know, but my local library has laser printers that I can use for 10 cents per black-and-white page, or 25 cents per color page. This means I could print up to 10 black-and-white copies or 4 color copies for $1 total! Perfect for a
Shoestring budget build! But why do I need to use a laser printer instead of an inkjet printer? Well, that's where it gets really interesting....
I found some tutorials online for making aged labels and stickers by soaking the paper with wet tea leaves or used coffee grounds. I did some experimenting yesterday using some tea leaves from whatever tea Mom had the night prior, which resulted in this weird purple and red color, and some used coffee grounds for the rest. I tried a few different applications, as well as heating a few strips of paper in the microwave to supposedly enhance the color. I haven't quite figured out the best technique to get the discoloration I want yet, but this is a step in the right direction. I want these stickers to look old and brown, like they had been on the bike for at least 50 years, but I don't want them to stand out against the rust on the bike. I want the stickers to be less of a "highlight" and more of a "detail," like something you don't catch upon first glance, but you might after looking a little closer. Aging the stickers by staining them brown, folding and wrinkling them, and maybe even tearing them, will help sell the effect I'm going for on this project.
View attachment 195060View attachment 195061
I've got more progress and photos to share, so hopefully those will be uploaded here later today, if I can get them all edited quickly enough.