ONE-OFF-PROJECTS
Understand. Adapt. Deliver.
I’m not a painter, graphic designer or builder. But I can learn any technique and make it work. That’s how I ended up creating one-off projects — from a 1.70 × 2.50 meter Terminator 1 on canvas, to bringing back a classic logo for the gym of one of Germany’s most well-known bodybuilders, to building multiple BMX flatland setups across Europe, from Spain to the Netherlands.
The Terminator
My friend David wanted an oversized Terminator 1 poster for his new fitness studio — something that simply doesn’t exist at that scale. I said, “No problem, I’ll paint it.” He called my bluff.
Using the grid method, I transferred the original poster onto a self-built, hand-stretched canvas and got to work. The leather jacket was by far the toughest part and made me start over more than once.
1.70 × 2.50 meter Terminator 1 movie poster, hand-painted in acrylic on canvas.
Body-Power-Studio Logo
When the Body-Power-Studio Weissenthurm was taken over by David Hoffmann, the original logo from the 1980s was meant to be brought back to life. Since there were no clean files or usable artwork left — only a T-shirt, a relic from a nearly forgotten time — I carefully redrew the logo from scratch and then vectorized it, creating a clean and usable version for prints and future applications.
BMX Flatland stages
Flatland stages are defined by two things: they have to be perfectly flat and perfectly level.
No one understands how to build them better than a flatlander.
A regular craftsman or stage builder might think, “That’s good enough.”
A flatlander knows it isn’t. Building flatland surfaces is both simple and complex at the same time.