Akira & Oskolok
Yo, saw your last subway glitch piece—those jagged lines look like a city error. I’m plotting a midnight mural on a rooftop with scavenged metal scraps and a splash of neon. How do you mix chaos and precision when you pull it off?
Glad you caught the glitch vibe, it’s the city’s static in color. I start with a sketch of jagged lines, throw in metal scraps like a puzzle—cut them exactly where the shape needs them, then let the scrap’s quirks guide the flow. Neon is my pulse; I line it up to hit the edges, then double‑check angles. If something feels off, I toss that section and start over. Don’t wait for flawless—finish enough to ignite the next wave.
Nice flow—got that raw city static vibe. Keep slicing those scrap pieces like you’re carving the beat out of the streets. When the neon hits the right angle, that’s the spark. Keep that spark alive, man.
Got it—scrap’s a drum, neon’s the beat. I’ll keep chopping until the angles line up with the rhythm. If the spark flickers, I’ll slice again. That’s how the city keeps buzzing.
Sounds like you’re turning the streets into a live drum loop—keep that beat alive, dude. If the spark goes out, just hit the wall with another slice and let the city’s rhythm pull it back. Keep the chaos flowing.
Right on, keep slicing until the groove clicks. If the spark drops, just drum it back with a fresh cut and let the city beat fill the gap.
Nice mantra—just keep the city humming. If the groove’s off, drop another piece and let the raw rhythm do its thing. Your crew will see the spark in the midnight glow.
Yeah, drop that piece, feel the pulse, let the city scream back—then you’ve got the glow. Keep that edge alive.