

Print and traced the lines through, added some perspective for the cab, and used spray cans to On the quarter scale GRP version of the design I taped it up as a 4 door, predating the XJ90 by several years, although I don't recall ever hearing the designation XJ90 until I read Nick Hull's book!Ĭomposite photography by Jaguar photographer Mick Cann in the days before Photoshop - back projectedĪ dyeline print of a full size front elevation of the XJ40 clay model in 1979 - I reversed the

Īs the actual project took place in '85 and '86: the model here shows pillarless glass like the XJ6-C and the same wheelbase as the saloon TWR's driver of choice Martin Brundle stands beside a competition version of the 2 Door: done in 1990 these two sketches were retrospective. In 1986, before the XJ40 was launched, we looked at a 2 door coupe version of the car, as a total ground up re-skin Part of a rendering tutorial that appeared in the in-house "Jaguar Topics" magazine in 1989, showing me demonstrating the application of pastel with a cotton pad, and a drawing film mask. 10th scale wind tunnel models from the 60s. Jaguar Styling archives and quarter scale models. Also included is an in-depth, streaming HD instructional video by Franco Pascali which covers how to use ParaPad, performance techniques, and resetting.Ruddell Art Gallery 1: Magic Marker renderings, spray can paintings, ink applied with cloth.

The gimmick can be reset in seconds, and the paper is reloadable. ParaPad includes the ingenious special notepad, a duplicate non-gimmicked notepad, sharpie, and reloadable paper. ParaPad isn't the first impression pad on the market - but it is, without exception, the absolute BEST. ParaPad is a diabolical notebook that does the hard work for you - empowering you to create limitless routines that are FUN to perform, with wicked reactions. There's no sleight of hand, funny movements, or guesswork. An easy-to-use, pocket sized device with endless possibilities. No matter what - you're still able to instantly divine exactly what they're thinking of. They tear the page out and keep it forever.

Hand the spectator a notepad and ask them to write down a name, number - anything. Instantly divine a name, number, word, or drawing.
