4815162342 – Shields Bialasik https://shieldsbialasik.com Life Is Art Wed, 14 Feb 2024 22:02:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://shieldsbialasik.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/shields-bialasik-65x65.png 4815162342 – Shields Bialasik https://shieldsbialasik.com 32 32 Global Window – Sales Sheet https://shieldsbialasik.com/global-window-sales-sheet Sat, 18 Nov 2023 16:39:49 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=2193 After the Designs were completed I needed a way to sell my Pop Journals and Global Window Journals and Greeting Cards. With my little old EPOSON 600 printer I set to work making a little catalog which I would then send out to my multiple sales representatives. It worked like a charm and looked pretty good too. Here is what I came up with.

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Awaken: A Study in Profound Touch https://shieldsbialasik.com/awaken-a-study-in-profound-touch Fri, 17 Nov 2023 20:15:10 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=2129

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Local Directory Template https://shieldsbialasik.com/local-directory-template Fri, 17 Nov 2023 20:10:04 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=2126

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Resilienza Project https://shieldsbialasik.com/resilienza-project Wed, 01 Jan 2020 15:50:26 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=2216 CREATIVE RESILIENCE FOR POSITIVE CHANGE

The vision of the Resilienza Project is to inspire and generate creative resilience in individuals and communities to enhance personal and collective wellbeing. Creative resilience is the ability to imagine and realize positive change while adapting and responding optimally to life’s challenges.

The weekly Chalk Murals are part of a campaign that supports the power of positive messaging to direct attention towards positive global ideas and solutions. Through these messages, the Resilienza Project aims to empower people of all ages to reimagine and create a better future.

In total we did over 150 amazing murals.
Check them out here: https://resilienzaproject.com/

Blue Prints for the Chalk Board where art was done. 

 

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Tourism Kiosk Quick Intro Video https://shieldsbialasik.com/tourism-kiosk-quick-intro-video Tue, 14 Feb 2017 19:43:44 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=2247



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LocalsGuide Tourism Kiosks https://shieldsbialasik.com/localsguide-tourism-kiosks Tue, 14 Feb 2017 19:42:01 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=2244

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Epicenter Communications https://shieldsbialasik.com/epicenter-communications Tue, 14 Feb 2012 17:32:59 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=2239

My very first marketing, logo & website design business card. My company was called Epicenter Communications with the website Epicenter.tv which later grew into one of the world’s most popular podcasts on crypto currency. In 2012 I was contacted and offered 1 bitcoin value of $500 for the domain name. I won’t say more than that.

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Obey Giant Journals https://shieldsbialasik.com/obey-giant-journal-collaboration Mon, 23 May 2011 18:24:50 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=64 My history with Obey Giant dates back to around 1994 when my friend Buster came back from a college break and gave me a little glow in the dark sticker.

Andre The Giant – Has a Posse

“You can do this Shields,” he said to me. I wasn’t sure what he meant at the time, but I stuck that sticker on the foot of my bed post and stared at
it night after night after night. Finally it clicked – “Yes, I can do this!”

I began making stickers, then coresponding with Shepard to learn more (via mail – no email then). Then moving on to cut Andre Stencils in exchange for giant boxes of T-shirts, stickers and posters, which I would then sell and post (Mostly between DC and Richmond, VA in and around 94 – 96).

(((Shields – Post Pics of Journal Mocks  You  Made Here)))

Early 2001 I sent Shepard a letter proposing an idea for some Obey Giant Journals. I was running my own greeting card and journal design business so was in heavy production of my own work in this format.  I hadn’t heard back from him, so wasn’t exactly sure what he was thinking until a 6-8 huge boxes arrived on my door step.

In total I think we must have made around 2000 limitted edition journals which were then sold online via ObeyGiant.com

Journals were 70 unlined pages with heavy duty cardboard cover and double top wire binding.

Four different covers
Included Obey stickers, signed by Shepard Fairey

$18 / Large Journal (10″ x 7.5″)
$13 / Small Journal (7.5″ x 4.75″)

We also did a series of small pocket sized journals in addition.
Here are some of the designs below of the larger journals.

Front:

Back:


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FOR SALE on PoshMark

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Cat and Monk https://shieldsbialasik.com/global-pop-series Sun, 15 May 2011 15:53:05 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=49
This is one of my favorite silhouette compositions created for the “Global Pop” series. A series of 21 silhouettes which I designed in 2002. The silhouette of the figure was pulled from a photograph in which a group of Budhist monks are walking in the rain. The image of the cat is pulled from a 19th century Impressionist painting.

Neither of these objects were silhouettes before I transformed them. This image was sold on a series of journals, pocket notebooks and then probably a few magnets.
My favorite element of this composition is the cat’s tail and the transparencey of the umprella against a strong red and black background.

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LocalsGuide – Community Powered Media https://shieldsbialasik.com/localsguide Thu, 08 Jun 2006 06:45:21 +0000 https://shieldsbialasik.com/?p=17

In the between the time of walking away from Passport2 and launching LocalsGuide I did some serious planning and research. Passport2 was a drill down on everything local about Ashland, Oregon and it had been from an outsiders perspective, meaning tourism. Now it was time to build the real Local’s Guide a guide which was from the insider perspective meaning hyperlocal.

I started researching domain names, looking at lots of different options, going back and forth trying to figure out what would best describe this next venture. LocalsGuide.com was available, but for $2000.00 usd. I thought about it for a day and then purchased it. I knew I could brand it and that it would stand strong. Every town needs a LocalsGuide and I knew just how to do it.

Now, if you ask me if I like working or if I like business I will tell you “No”. It’s down right ugly and dog eat dog out there. You get to see some ugly aspects of people in how they handle money, issues of jealousy, pride, fairness. These all get examined and played out in business. You give an inch they take a foot.

It’s not always bad… but you have to be smart. Unless you are absolutely lucky in the choices you make you typically are gonna have to go through some bumps and bruises before you really start to get into your groove. Until then the real trick is to settle in for the ride and be the last one standing.

Business takes it casualties and those casualties have occurred in the paths I have traveled. Sometimes I have paid sometimes others. These payments were made in lost money, lost time, hurt feelings, failed expectations, perhaps even betrayal some might have felt.

I love creation and the opportunity to take something from an idea to reality. I have always been an artist and this is why I work for myself and create. For sake of privacy at this period in time I will refrain from fully naming individuals out of respect, but I will talk about some of my experiences in this stage of my life because they were formative and it’s also important for me to disclose my experience as it happened to me.

So… immediately after walking away from Passport2, and let me say more about this cause I have mentioned it quite a bit. I walked away from this business, throwing my hands up in the air because I had given up any hope or confidence that the business could mature into any further success than what we had accomplished. We were in a stalemate of who would take ownership of and drive the company forward. I was done making any continued investment.  I needed to respect the financial investment which had been made into the business by Jim the owner of the Stratford Inn and being unable to match it stepped out.

During this period of closure I had been in communication with a local corporate executive named Ben B. who was very interested in the Passport model. He had been showing the model around to a few of his buddies and taken a keen interest in learning more bout the project. I began speaking with him on the phone and developing a relationship.

This relationship continued after I had left Passport2 and I then spent some of the next four months in business discussion and planning with this individual and a few of his business partners. It was an interesting time of uncertainty and decision making. Very quickly… within about one month I had entirely re-invent myself with a new business, brand and service. I now had potential business investors who were very interested in my hyperlocal media model. I worked some long hours pulling all of this together and getting it off the ground. Ben watched and provided some limited feedback.

Ben eventually introduced me to his friend Stuart L, an East Coast executive who was also keen to join in on the project. It sounded exciting and… though I wasn’t going to get distracted from making this business a success, I needed to make a living and support my family.  In one specific episode I remember a phone conversation I had with Stuart L. about the need for proper funding for the project to be successful.

“Shields, Do you know how much money I made last year?”
“I made three hundred thousand dollars… stop wasting my time.”

WOW…. what an idiot I thought – What type of person says something like this.  There I was essentially broke…  working like a maniac to launch a new startup business… and this guy insults me for my effort. He makes so much money but can’t even invest one cent to make my life just a bit easier.

I quickly learned that being a CEO of Comcast or Disney does not qualify anyone to be an entrepreneur. These guys are good at running the shop once it has been setup but not great at really having what it takes to move through the creative and survival elements of an early startup.

I quickly lost more my respect for Ben and Stuart and abruptly brought our business negotiations to an end by simply pulling the plug and walking away. LocalsGuide was mine. I was the sole financial investor.

Had cash been on the table it would have been a different story but as far as talk goes.
Well you know the saying.

Money Talks, Bullshit walks… but in this case I walked and with the intellectual property.

It wasn’t the best way to end the relationship. These guys had put in some time of their own and if Stuart was really making $300k per year… I guess he might have lost a couple of grand on this project in time…. Sorry Stuart 🙁

They were probably just as equally frustrated with me as well. I was quite off the cuff, young and impulsive. I knew what I wanted and I didn’t want to be distracted. This hyperlocal model for me was about so much more than just making money. It was about making and allowing people to create media in a totally new way… Community Powered Media.

I want to take a moment to acknowledge some of the folks now who worked beside me in the early days even if things might have ended on a bad note or came to an abrupt end.  Kyle Stitch, Jamie Glass, Jay Newman, Curt Evans, Marick Kelly, Gwen Specicher, Maya. These guys all put in a shit load of time and energy to help me in making LocalsGuide a success. Kyle especially stood with me helping me launch issue one of LocalsGuide in November 2006, and then working with me for quite some time after that. This wasn’t easy work and I know not everyone got what they wanted out of the experience, and this is what I mean by business not being a fun thing.

People put in time and you want to be fair, treat them as friends, and reward everyone equally… and you do your best. Then at the end of the day the bills have your name on it. You’re the one with the giant debts, the risk and the responsibility. As a business owner you have to make those hard decisions which inevitably piss people off or break up friendships.

And So it goes… business is ugly… and we push forward!

This is just a small glimpse into the early days of LocalsGuide with more tales to tell, but we shall save that for another time.

You can read more about the story of issue – One Here

 

More about the model of LocalGuide – HERE  ((Coming SOON)))

 

 

 

 

 

 

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