I began this project with the idea that I have physically drawn very little in recent time. I was discovering on my free time, that I was enjoying the results of drawing on spin art cards, and then doing spin art on top of the drawing. I recieved a spin art toy as a gift for christmas, from a friend who was making reference to this project, which I had done earlier that semester. So I sat down, and decided to try to draw up three dreams. I decided that it was not absolutely necessary that I try to draw exactly what I would have dreamt, but that I could use props to assist in my sketching. I ended up using a photo, my own wrist, and I tried to mimic the way that zombies were depicted in a zombie-centric comic book. The photo I used to help guide my drawing was one of my girlfriend, because she seemed to be appearing in my dreams on a pretty high frequency, my wrist I used to try to conceptualize something that I saw in a dream I had, where not only was I wearing a watch, but I could actually make out the time displayed on it. And obviously, the zombie comic I used to help depict what would be entirely common in many of the dreams I have had where I am doing some serious battle with zombies.
After I had ensured that the drawings were drawn dark enough, I took a paper cut to the size of a spin art card, and cropped down the final three sketches. I'd actually drawn about 5 or 6 sketches, but decided that I liked things in threes, and that I would pick the ones I was most pleased with. After cropping the drawings, I decided that the spin art should be conservative in its execution, and that it should have a common uniting theme. This is where I decided that the spin art should be confined to the colors red, green, and blue, one for each, and arranged in the common order one would see on a CRT based screen. To me, this allowed me to situate the dream contents, drawn in greyscale, in an arrangement of color, juxtaposing the dream world into the real world. After finishing the spin art on each drawing, I decided that they needed to have some sort of mounting to them, because they just looked bare without some sort of framing. For this, I chose mostly secondary colors, and I felt that they were aesthetically pleasing together.