I wanted to keep the traditional sins, and although having only the words and letters themselves would have been good, (after all, it is a typography assignment so type should be first and foremost) I wanted to incorporate illustrations as well. I decided to combine animals (again) with type (flashback: animal illustrative type). This time, I wanted to keep the tone serious and intimidating, and black and white helped with that as well.
These are done on scratch boards with an X-acto knife. You just take the knife and scratch the surface with varying levels of pressure to create strokes. You work with highlights to create figures and shapes, rather than shadows and once a scratch is place, it cannot be undone. This was a different process for me, because I am used to being able to undo as often as needed digitally, but pretty soon, I wasn't concerned with it and started to enjoy it.
I have scanned these in and cleaned them up a little bit, getting rid of my pencil grid lines, etc., so that they look more polished.
For the packaging, I hand-sewed two sheets of scratch boards, lining them with black fabric in the inside for some premium feel. I chose red thread to stand out from the black and show the uneven, hand-crafted nature, but now I wonder what it'd looked like with black thread that disappears instead.
Here they are, enjoy!