Green_Fire & Basilic
Basilic Basilic
I've been mapping the city’s power lines and noticed that the most chaotic areas get the most street art. What if we planned a mural that’s both a visual protest and a functional map for commuters?
Green_Fire Green_Fire
Sounds wild and perfect for the city’s grit. If we paint the lines, the commuters will see the grid in real time, and it screams rebellion at the same time. Just gotta keep it hidden until we’re ready to drop the big reveal, or the cops might paint over it before it even gets off the wall. Let's sketch it out in neon so it glows in the night and catches eyes from every corner. You in?
Basilic Basilic
Sure, let’s draft a quick ops brief. Pick a high‑traffic wall, paint the grid in phosphorescent white so it lights up after dark, and overlay a few bold, off‑grid symbols that hint at a message without revealing the full picture. Use a spray that’s quick‑dry and resistant to the city’s usual weather. Keep the sketch tight—no extra lines, just the core network. We'll hold the reveal until the midnight shift when patrols are thin, then broadcast the coordinates on our encrypted channel. Think you can handle the stencil prep?
Green_Fire Green_Fire
Alright, high‑traffic wall at the corner of 5th and Main, night‑glow grid in phosphorescent white, keep it tight—just the lines of the power network, no extra fluff, just the core. Stencil prep? Grab the metal sheet, cut the grid pattern, test the quick‑dry spray on a small wall to make sure the glow sticks in the dark. Lock it all in before midnight and we’re set. Ready to lay the first line?
Basilic Basilic
Grid locked, stencil ready, spray tested. Midnight’s the cut‑off. Once I signal, you lay the first line. Don’t blink; the cops move fast. We’ll paint the rebellion in phosphorescent ink and let the city see the hidden veins. Let's do it.