Crady Art, LLC
Babes'n Blasters Vol. 10
Babes'n Blasters Vol. 10
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Babes’n Blasters Vol. 10 – Limited Edition Fine Art Giclée Print
"Babes’n Blasters Vol. 10" – A romantic adventure of love and ray guns! Bathed in the electric glow of cosmic adventure, she captures a heroine poised between elegance and danger. Dressed in a form-fitting crimson flight suit that gleams like lacquered vinyl, she lounges in the command chair of a retro-futurist spacecraft—one leg crossed with nonchalant confidence, raygun in hand, eyes steady as the stars beyond her viewport. Behind her swirl planetary rings and UFOs, evoking the wide-eyed wonder of mid-century pulp magazines where peril and glamour collided under fluorescent starlight. Every curve, reflection, and chrome accent suggests a universe where courage is couture and style saves the day.
This piece radiates a tongue-in-cheek homage to the “space sirens” of 1960s Japanese and American sci-fi art. It merges painterly realism with comic-book sensibility—combining the sheen of Barbarella, the crisp precision of Thunderbirds, and the color-grading of vintage magazine covers. The tactile details—the stitching on her suit, the embossed insignia, the glow of analog dials—transform nostalgia into a lush, cinematic portrait. Babes’n Blasters Vol. 10 is both a love letter to pop futurism and a wry celebration of pulp-era spectacle, where the cosmos was just another stage for beauty and bravado.
This limited edition, bordered *giclée print is crafted on Canson Baryta Gloss paper, prized by fine art collectors for its rich contrast, deep blacks, and archival quality.
Paper: Museum-grade Canson Baryta Gloss
Print Method: Archival pigment giclée
Finish: Signed and numbered
Certificate of Authenticity
Art Style: The visual language draws from Showa-era Japanese sci-fi poster art, Franco-Italian space pin-ups, and American pulp magazine covers of the 1950s-70s. Stylistically, it fuses digital airbrush painting with oil-like realism—smooth gradients, cinematic backlighting, and film-grain texture evoke the look of aged magazine stock. The typography, layout, and faux price tags mimic serialized manga-style anthologies, adding playful meta-nostalgia to the composition. Influences include illustrators like Shigeru Komatsuzaki, Chris Foss, and Hajime Sorayama, with tonal nods to Danger Diabolik, Ultra Q, and Space Battleship Yamato.
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