top tattoos for girls 2012 image
Dale
quote on top back,what quote?
Answer
If you are looking for inspirational:
"Live as if you were to die tomorrow
Learn as if you were to live forever..."
http://www.jucoolimages.com/images/quotes/quotes_18.gif
If you are looking for rebellious:
"Well-behaved women seldom make history."
http://www.jucoolimages.com/images/quotes/quotes_18.gif
If you are looking for self-accomplishment in life:
"She turned her can'ts into cans and her dreams into plans."
http://varsitysideline.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/plans.jpg
If you are looking for goals in life:
"Reality is wrong
Dreams are for real"
http://free.bridal-shower-themes.com/img/s/h/short-cute-quotes-for-girls_4.jpg
If you are looking for inspirational:
"Live as if you were to die tomorrow
Learn as if you were to live forever..."
http://www.jucoolimages.com/images/quotes/quotes_18.gif
If you are looking for rebellious:
"Well-behaved women seldom make history."
http://www.jucoolimages.com/images/quotes/quotes_18.gif
If you are looking for self-accomplishment in life:
"She turned her can'ts into cans and her dreams into plans."
http://varsitysideline.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/plans.jpg
If you are looking for goals in life:
"Reality is wrong
Dreams are for real"
http://free.bridal-shower-themes.com/img/s/h/short-cute-quotes-for-girls_4.jpg
I need help designing a bmw related tattoo?
Emily
I'm entering a contest to win a 2012 BMW 3 series car.
To win, I'm going to be getting a (fake) tattoo. Maybe real. I dont know.
I need a tattoo design that has the bmw logo, 2012, and somehow the numbers 5.9 in the design.
If you have any ideas, PLEASE let me know. ;)
I might be able to pay whoever designs it..
btw. I'm a girl, so nothing too manly. Hahaha.
Answer
My own recommendation probably isn't going to be something that immediately psyches you out or anything at first. However, I may be able to help you reach into the corporate mind a little. If that is who is judging the contest, it will at least help a little bit. However, if the judges aren't corporate, disregard this. BTW, it would be a good idea to research into the company, it's structure and the people you will be appealing to. ALWAYS do your homework on the people you are trying to please. If you get into their minds when you design it, you will have a better chance at winning.
The BEST thing you can do is to keep it simple. A corporate executive is the kind of person who deals with everyone's work and ideas (including artists and designers), and goes through tons of designs, paperwork, etc. every single day. Peoples' ideas tend to be elaborate, simply due to imagination. So something that is going to appeal to an executive (and most people) is an elegant simplicity. Many of your competitors will be going overboard on the design, making it look super elaborate because we have this odd, natural feeling that complication equals beautiful. It doesn't. On the other end of the spectrum, other competitors will be doing something oversimplified. For instance, basically copying and pasting existing designs. This wont have a great deal of appeal, either. What you need to do is find the middle ground. Something between complicated and overly simple, but that gives off an air of original simplicity upon being viewed.
In addition, you are going to want it to look really slick and cool. You don't want to go with the usual stuff that people picture when they think of tattoos, like thorn-roses, tribal designs, or any other things that give off the impression of a biker bar. Remember that you are dealing with a worldwide corporate auto manufacturer, one that is from Europe and designs very sharp, cool, modern-looking vehicles. I am doubting they are going to be greatly impressed with the aforementioned designs.
Avoid doing the car itself. That's kind of tacky.
I would probably figure out some simple, sharp design that features the beamer logo, while incorporating a tad bit of your own art and those numbers worked into the same single object. Keep in mind balance. When we view something, we first look right to the center (well, actually a tad bit above the center, for whatever reason). If the focal point isn't centered, it will look odd and unbalanced. So you want the focal point to be there, and then outwards from the center have things that also impress. Think it out logically, think about the message you want to communicate. If they look at the center and then outwards, is there a way you can have your design sequentially communicate the message from the center outwards? That's up to you. But regardless, actually put a LOT of thought into the ordering and balance and sizing of everything in the design, as well as the overall design itself. You can bet that all the other top competitors will be doing the same thing. There may even be some actual designers in the contest.
The last tip: please design this yourself. Don't try to buy someone elses' design and then enter it. If you can't draw it, which I highly encourage you to do regardless of your abilities, then at least come up with the entire thing yourself and work with someone very closely to get it as close to what is in your mind as possible. Make a bunch of mockups, as best you can with your ability. This will help you work on it, because a design will look different visually than it does in the mind. But once again, don't just try to pay someone else to produce something for you, because that just isn't cool. The judges and the people putting on the contest want to see original art from people who can create it (whether you draw it or not it should be yours) because, well, that's the whole point of this thing; they aren't just looking to give out a car, they are looking for cool, original new ways to see their brand and logo, and potentially looking for someone to employ. You might even get into some doodie if you try to pass someone else's work off as your own (by the original designer or by the company or by both). And why would someone else do that anyways, if they could just send in THEIR design for themselves and try to win themselves a car? Point is, it should come from you.
My own recommendation probably isn't going to be something that immediately psyches you out or anything at first. However, I may be able to help you reach into the corporate mind a little. If that is who is judging the contest, it will at least help a little bit. However, if the judges aren't corporate, disregard this. BTW, it would be a good idea to research into the company, it's structure and the people you will be appealing to. ALWAYS do your homework on the people you are trying to please. If you get into their minds when you design it, you will have a better chance at winning.
The BEST thing you can do is to keep it simple. A corporate executive is the kind of person who deals with everyone's work and ideas (including artists and designers), and goes through tons of designs, paperwork, etc. every single day. Peoples' ideas tend to be elaborate, simply due to imagination. So something that is going to appeal to an executive (and most people) is an elegant simplicity. Many of your competitors will be going overboard on the design, making it look super elaborate because we have this odd, natural feeling that complication equals beautiful. It doesn't. On the other end of the spectrum, other competitors will be doing something oversimplified. For instance, basically copying and pasting existing designs. This wont have a great deal of appeal, either. What you need to do is find the middle ground. Something between complicated and overly simple, but that gives off an air of original simplicity upon being viewed.
In addition, you are going to want it to look really slick and cool. You don't want to go with the usual stuff that people picture when they think of tattoos, like thorn-roses, tribal designs, or any other things that give off the impression of a biker bar. Remember that you are dealing with a worldwide corporate auto manufacturer, one that is from Europe and designs very sharp, cool, modern-looking vehicles. I am doubting they are going to be greatly impressed with the aforementioned designs.
Avoid doing the car itself. That's kind of tacky.
I would probably figure out some simple, sharp design that features the beamer logo, while incorporating a tad bit of your own art and those numbers worked into the same single object. Keep in mind balance. When we view something, we first look right to the center (well, actually a tad bit above the center, for whatever reason). If the focal point isn't centered, it will look odd and unbalanced. So you want the focal point to be there, and then outwards from the center have things that also impress. Think it out logically, think about the message you want to communicate. If they look at the center and then outwards, is there a way you can have your design sequentially communicate the message from the center outwards? That's up to you. But regardless, actually put a LOT of thought into the ordering and balance and sizing of everything in the design, as well as the overall design itself. You can bet that all the other top competitors will be doing the same thing. There may even be some actual designers in the contest.
The last tip: please design this yourself. Don't try to buy someone elses' design and then enter it. If you can't draw it, which I highly encourage you to do regardless of your abilities, then at least come up with the entire thing yourself and work with someone very closely to get it as close to what is in your mind as possible. Make a bunch of mockups, as best you can with your ability. This will help you work on it, because a design will look different visually than it does in the mind. But once again, don't just try to pay someone else to produce something for you, because that just isn't cool. The judges and the people putting on the contest want to see original art from people who can create it (whether you draw it or not it should be yours) because, well, that's the whole point of this thing; they aren't just looking to give out a car, they are looking for cool, original new ways to see their brand and logo, and potentially looking for someone to employ. You might even get into some doodie if you try to pass someone else's work off as your own (by the original designer or by the company or by both). And why would someone else do that anyways, if they could just send in THEIR design for themselves and try to win themselves a car? Point is, it should come from you.
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