Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Henrik Lundqvist 2016-17 Mask

Henrik Lundqvist of the New York Rangers (born March 2, 1982 in Are, Sweden.)

Artist: David Gunnarsson

Lundqvist has had multiple masks this season.

it seems he started the season with this.







Next was this mask:






This is the 3rd mask he wore this season:





In early April David Gunnarsson posted this mask, but it seems he might not have worn it very long:





And then what David referred to as Hank's Playoff Mask:








These seemed to be his first pads:



Then he switched to these:




Craig Anderson 2016-17 Mask

Craig Anderson of the Ottawa Senators (born May 21, 1981 in Park Ridge, IL.)

Artist: Sylvie Marsolais of Sylabrush

Article at InGoal Magazine:

"Craig is a huge Corvette fan," Marsolais told InGoal via email. "As you can see on his previous mask[s], the Corvette is always on there!
His demands were real simple: go similar [to] last year, but with the new Corvette model. Then we suggested to put the C7R model--which has a more racing feel to it, and has a meaner look."
















Anderson also had a 25th anniversary mask:

When Sylvie Marsolais of Sylabrush Airbrush set out to paint Craig Anderson’s new Ottawa Senators 25th anniversary mask she was really preparing to paint two masks.
The first one is the mask everyone saw when Anderson first wore it on the ice, a more traditional replica of Damian Rhodes old Ottawa mask with tributes to Patrick Lalime and Daniel Alfredsson. But there is another mask hidden underneath the black edges of that, under a layer of what Marsolais called “ghost paint,” that doesn’t come out until heat is applied.
Hidden near the Lalime portrait is Marvin the Martian, who was a staple on all of Lalime’s masks.
“It won’t be visible on the ice but if you apply some heat, whether from your hand, a hair dryer, or hot water, you’ll see things appear,” said Marsolais. “It’s like painting two masks on one.”
The Lalime and Alfredsson portraits are contained in a red maple leaf on each side that appears to be framed by simple black paint around the outer edge of the mask down to the chin. But when heat is added, the black fades to reveal another layer of detail underneath, including the heritage logo on top.
“At first view, it looks like a traditional paint job, but under the black paint of the mask is a lot more,” Marsolais said. “On top there’s the Senators 25th anniversary logo and on the Lalime side there is Marvin the Martian and there is a landscape of Mars on the lower sides.”