Rank: Newbie Groups: Member
Joined: 3/19/2010 Posts: 2 Location: Tallinn
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Okay, pinball machines aren't really popular in my country.. only some supermarkets/pool halls etc have some in them. I have mostly ignored them the bigger part of my life, but on one day the amazing art work caught my eye, it's very full with energy, the colors are banging and everything is lookin great.
Can anyone explain me how pinball art is created? It's really hard to find decent information in the internet about that kind of thing, considering that the pinball culture isn't very alive nowadays (or maybe i'm mistaken?) I would like to myself create also that kind of art, if it is possible, I am an "artist" working in traditional media and some digital stuff also.. I have no glue how it's made, the smooth look and the high level of detail tells me that airbrush/brushes/paint/markers are maybe used for the process, but the end result is put behind a glass/ somehow printed on the glass? or something like that..
It's an amazing art form that's somewhy so underrated - or atleast I haven't heard any place giving credit to the artists making pinball machines - only some pinball fan made sites, have a little sections about the art work. I would like to see that art form stay alive, rather than fade away. There aren't much artists doing that kind of thing nowadays i quess? Or atleast i read that there's only 1 active pinball machine manufacturer, and maybe some oldschool artists who still create art with the similar style..
Can someone also explain what is considered "backglass" English isn't my mother tongue, so the term is a little confusing to me. I have understood that it's the part of the machine, where the artwork is on, or is it considered a seperate material? ..What is back glass made from? Is it plexyglass?
I hope that my question dosen't sound too stupied, all comments/links/contacts/books(?.. if i can get my hands on them in here.. I live in eastern europe) are welcomed, where I could learn the process of making of it.
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 12/8/2007 Posts: 163 Location: Middle o' Oregon
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Hello and welcome! I wish we had pinballs in our supermarkets. Pinball art is created by artists. The silkscreen process was used for many years. Ink on the back of the glass, one color at a time. Opaque areas got a coat of paint - usually black or silver. Roy Parker did the art on 287 games for Gottlieb alone between 1935 and 1966. George Molentin did nearly 150 games for Williams. The Internet Pinball Machine Database has over 40,000 pictures of over 5,000 machines. The backglass is the glass at the back of the game. In early years, it was used to display the score as well as decorative function. In the 1980s plastic replaced glass.  Hope this helps. Cheers.
"Knowledge is Good." - Emil Faber
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Rank: Newbie Groups: Member
Joined: 3/19/2010 Posts: 2 Location: Tallinn
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Thanks for the reply ballsofsteel (lol, nice name)!.. If they are screenprinted, then that means, that they must had used quite a lot of screens.. because they are quite multicolored.. These images by Roy Parker I might get them (that they are screen printed), because they are quite graphical. I have to mention that they look f* great! I'll watch that link also right now.. but what about those images that look more like paintings, for example the Lethal Weapon 3 ?  Is there also possible to buy that backglass/backglass material somewhere? (Blank I mean).. to try to screen print something on my own on there.
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 12/8/2007 Posts: 163 Location: Middle o' Oregon
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They may use a different process here in the modern era.... like the 4-color lithograph used to print color pictures in a magazine for example. Blank material? It looks like window glass about 5mm thick. Not the artist problem here but rather the screen printer.....  The final opaque silver coat was screened upside-down.
"Knowledge is Good." - Emil Faber
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
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Joined: 11/17/2008 Posts: 60 Location: Roxboro, NC, USA
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I assume that modern artwork is created on a computer possibly using something like Adobe Illustrator or some other graphics art software. A review I read online about Stern's Big Buck Hunter Pro included some close-up photos of some cabinet artwork and it clearly showed some very crude editing work on the computer.
The cabinet artwork on my two Stern machines appears to be ink jet printed with very visible dots of ink. The playfield of Lord of the Rings seems to be ink jet printed but Simpsons Pinball Party appears to be screen printed or uses some other printing method that does not leave tell tale dot patterns.
currently own: Star Trek Next Generation Twilight Zone Simpsons Pinball Party Lord of the Rings
previously owned: Supersonic Voltar
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