
In an era where it's considered cool to claim to be a sneaker collector/ connoisseur, few of these actors/ singers/ hypebeasts can show & prove their sneaker addiction's history as much as Will Smith can (well, Spike Lee can). It is almost to everyone's knowledge that part of what made the show The Prince of Bel Air was Will Smith's way of getting "Dress to Impress" with colorful clothes and basketball sneakers which, back then, were a counterculture that was mostly relevant to Hip Hop heads.
Back then there was no sponsoring of artists from sneaker companies (apart from Run DMC's deal with Adidas), but the show kept it real with the West Philadelphian sneakers, attitude and Hip Hop vibe. Will Smith can boast a wonderful career partly because of this, just as much as Nike's permanent restocking of original Air Jordans is due to Hip Hop celebrities showing off their sneakers on TV.
I'm not into minimalism when it comes to sneakers, I think what made the beauty of the shoes is the complexity of their lines, arrangement of colors and wild , provocative shapes and materials, which is the reason why I like to draw them with precision.
Giclée print on thick 180g non-glossy archival paper.
Every print is watermarked on bottom left corner. Prints 18 x 24" // A2s and above are signed and dated.
Prints dimensions (Please read carefully) :
American continent :
_ 12 x 16 inches (250g paper)
_ 18 x 24 inches (180g paper)
_ 20 x 30 inches (180g paper)
_ 24 x 36 inches (180g paper)
Europe :
_ A3 format (29,7 x 42 cm) : Please pick up option "A3 11.7 x 16.5 inches".
_ A2 format (42 x 59.4 cm) : Please pick up option "A2 16.5 x 23.4 inches".
_ 50 x 70cm : Please pick up option "50x70cm 19.7x27.56 Inches".
_ 60 x 80cm : Please pick up option "60x80cm 23.62 x 31.5 Inches".
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Any question be sure to let me know.