Mark Franklin Arts
Mark Franklin Arts
  • Portfolio
    • Architecture & BuildingTechnical illustrations of buildings and architectural subjects.
    • Automotive & TransportTechnical illustrations and cutaway drawings of transport related subjects, including cars, motorcycles, commercial vehicles, trains, ships and boats
    • Civil Aviation & AerospaceTechnical illustrations and cutaway drawings of civil aircraft and helicopters, spacecraft, aerospace and aviation subjects.
    • Diagrams & Information GraphicsTechnical illustrations of a variety of subjects in diagrammatic style, line and colour, information graphics, instructional and educational illustration, charts and graphs.
    • Science, Technology & EngineeringTechnical illustrations and cutaway drawings of scientific, technical and engineering subjects.
    • Cutaways & Exploded ViewsTechnical illustrations, cutaway drawings and exploded views of a variety of subjects
    • Line DrawingsTechnical illustrations as simple black and white line drawings.
    • MapsMaps of cities, countries and regions. Route maps, historical and battle maps, illustrated maps.
    • Weapons & WarTechnical illustrations, cutaway drawings and exploded views of military subjects. Guns, firearms, small arms and infantry support weapons; artillery, missiles and ordnance; swords and edged weapons; tactical and strategic weapons; military insignia, badges and medals; battle maps and tactical diagrams.
    • Other WorkRealistic and technical illustration, digital retouching and photo manipulation, cardboard engineered models.

airliner

Civil Aviation & Aerospace

Aviation Accidents

Illustrations for “What Went Wrong–Twenty Years of Airline Accidents (1996-2015)” by Graham Deighton [Austin Macauley Publishers]. Trans World Airlines Flight 800, July 1996. Trans World Airlines Flight 800 (TWA800) was a Boeing 747-100 that exploded and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near East Moriches, New York, on July 17, 1996, Read more

By Mark Franklin, 2 years26th September 2024 ago
Civil Aviation & Aerospace

Civil Aviation

De Havilland Comet The Comet was the first jet-engined passenger airliner and made its first test flight on 27 July 1949, the British Overseas Airways Company (BOAC) having already committed itself to the purchase of 10 aircraft. A clean, low-drag design had swept wings, integral wing fuel tanks, a pressurised Read more

By Mark Franklin, 11 years5th September 2015 ago

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