Custom

AI-Generated Designs for Creators Who Sell

Order custom t-shirt art, wall prints, clipart sets, and more — all tailored to your exact style!

t-shirt design, clipart sets, wall art prints, book cover art, greeting cards, pinterest pins, photorealistic, ai-generated images

In need of stunning images for your next project?

Let me help you by crafting accurate prompts to generate amazing quality outputs using Ideogram — no guesswork, no fluff. Whether you need bold t-shirt designs, cute clipart sets, moody book covers, or scroll-stopping Pinterest pins, I’ll handle the creative direction so you can focus on what you do best: creating, selling, and growing your brand. Pick your image type below, fill out a quick form, and I’ll take care of the visuals.

Hello There!

Hey, I’m Asha — your AI design whisperer! Fueled by caffeine and Ideogram, I use custom prompts and creative strategy to turn everyday ideas into scroll-stopping designs for shirts, prints, pins, and more. No fluff. No filler. Just clean, custom visuals you can actually use commercially.

Want a closer look at my design style?

I've built an impressive gallery of designs that should give you an idea as to the type of images I can create for you - especially for black colored apparel. Hit that button below and explore my public profile on Ideogram.

Custom AI-generated images made simple

How the Process Works

Step 1

Choose your design type + fill out a form.

Step 2

Pay 50% deposit and I get to work.

Step 3

Pay for the completed work and get your final files.

325 AI Prompt Templates for Ideogram

Want to Create Your Own Designs Like I Do?

Grab my exact prompt system and start designing with confidence in Ideogram.

Latest from the Blog

a stylish African–American woman in her mid-40s wearing a black leather trench coat while holding a lukewarm kale smoothie and looking judgmentally at a stack of unpaid property tax bills.

Bloodbaths and Beepers: Why Blade is Our Midlife Crisis

June 13, 20265 min read

Pull up a chair — carefully, mind your lower back — and let’s talk about 1998. It was a simpler time. A time when we thought the peak of human achievement was a transparent blue iMac and when we genuinely believed that wearing head-to-toe black leather in a Los Angeles summer was a sustainable lifestyle choice.

PDF Short Read Guide-Bloodbaths and Beepers_A Xennial Perspective on  1998's Blade

Enter the movie Blade. Before the modern era of superhero fatigue, where every cinematic outing feels like a three-hour homework assignment on multiverse theory, we had Wesley Snipes in a pair of wraparound shades looking like the coolest person to ever exist.

I rewatched it recently, expecting a hit of nostalgia, but what I got was a full-blown sociological epiphany. Blade isn’t just a movie about a guy who "walks in the sun" and stabs vampires; it’s a terrifyingly accurate mirror of our transition from the nihilistic cool of the '90s to the "I hope this fiber supplement works" reality of 2026.

1. The Blood Rave vs. The 9:00 PM Bedtime

Remember the opening scene? That underground meatpacker rave where blood starts spraying from the sprinklers? In 1998, we watched that and thought, "Man, I wish I knew where that club was". We were the generation of industrial techno and questionable choices. We defined ourselves by our "subcultural capital" — basically, how much cool, underground stuff we knew about that our parents didn't.

Fast forward to today. If blood started spraying from the ceiling of a venue, I wouldn’t be worried about vampires; I’d be worried about the property damage, the insurance premiums, and whether the red stains would come out of my dry-clean-only "good" sweater.

comparing a crowded, underground rave with dark red goo dripping from the ceiling to a quiet living room where a 45-year-old White man is excitedly unboxing a new ergonomic pillow.

Sociologically speaking, we’ve moved from a transgressive culture to a risk-aversion culture. Blade spends the whole movie fighting the "Purebloods" — those stuffy, old-money vampires who run the world from boardrooms. Back then, we hated the "Man".

Now? Half of us are the middle-management version of the "Man", just trying to figure out how to use the corporate messaging app without accidentally sending a cat meme to the CEO. The rebellion is dead, guys. We traded the blood rave for a white noise machine and a solid eight hours of sleep.

2. Technology: From Cool Gadgets to Digital Handcuffs

Blade had the coolest gear. He had that silver stake-launcher, the UV grenades, and a modified muscle car that probably got four miles to the gallon but sounded like a literal god. But notice something? He was unreachable. When Blade was out doing his thing, he wasn't checking his notifications. He wasn't being pestered by a "vampire-hunting" app asking him to rate his latest kill or getting "pings" from his mentor, Whistler, about a missed Zoom call.

In the late '90s, we lived in the era of Disconnected Connectivity. You had a pager, maybe a brick-sized cellphone if your parents were loaded, but you still had privacy. Today, we are living in a sociological Panopticon. We are constantly monitored, tagged, and "reached out to." Blade’s struggle was about physical survival against a hidden predator.

a 1990s silver pager glowing with a "911" message in contrast to a modern smartphone overflowing with 432 unread notifications and a low battery warning.

Our struggle is against the "attention economy". If Blade were made today, he’d probably have to stop mid-fight to fix a two-factor authentication error on his sword’s biometric grip. The movie reminds us of a time when "going off the grid" didn't require a digital detox retreat in Sedona. Instead, it just meant leaving the house.

3. The Villain’s Ego and the Death of Nuance

Let’s talk about Deacon Frost. He was the quintessential '90s villain: arrogant, tech-savvy, and obsessed with "disrupting" the old vampire order. He was basically a Silicon Valley tech bro before the term existed, just with more fangs and fewer fleece vests. He wanted to turn everyone into vampires because he thought the "old way" was boring.

Back in '98, Frost’s "us vs. them" rhetoric felt like standard movie tropes. But watching it now? It feels like an average Tuesday on any social media platform. The film depicts a society fractured into tiers — the humans (clueless), the familiars (the sell-outs), and the vampires (the elite). It’s a perfect metaphor for the hyper-polarization we deal with daily.

the movie vampire male villain looking trendy and arrogant while taking a selfie, contrasted with a tired Blonde woman staring at a confusing social media feed full of polarizing political rants.

We’ve become a society of "familiars", desperately trying to align ourselves with whatever vampire power structure promises us a bit of safety or clout. Blade (a.k.a the "Daywalker") is the ultimate outsider. He doesn’t fit into any camp.

As Xennials, we used to pride ourselves on that "whatever" attitude — the ability to stand outside the system and mock it. Now, the system is so loud and all-encompassing that being a "Daywalker" just feels like being exhausted.

Slaying the Suck: Why 1998 Was the Last Great Year to Be Human

Watching Blade in your mid-40s is a trip. It’s a reminder that we once valued "cool" above "comfortable", and "mystery" above "metadata". We’re the last generation to remember what it was like to be a human in a world that wasn't yet fully "vampirized" by 24/7 digital capitalism.

So, what’s the takeaway? Maybe we don’t need to wear leather dusters to the grocery store (though, honestly, why not? It hides the muffin top). But maybe we can reclaim a little bit of that 1998 Blade energy.

We’re the last generation to remember what it was like to be a human in a world that wasn't yet fully "vampirized" by 24/7 digital capitalism.

Let’s try to be a little less reachable, a little more skeptical of the "purebloods" in their corporate towers, and for the love of everything holy, let’s stop worrying about the "sprinklers" and just enjoy the music.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to go put some ice on my knee. I stood up too fast while thinking about the '90s. Stay thirsty, my friends — but, you know, for water. Drink more water. It’s good for your skin.

Blade movie nostalgia1998 pop cultureXennial midlife crisisWesley Snipes Blade90s nostalgia blogblood rave sceneattention economy sociologyDeacon Frost analysistech distraction humor90s vs modern lifestyle
blog author image

Head Watcher Asha

Blogger and social commentator at Hellmouth Social, on supernatural film and tv IPs released between 1980-2016.

Back to Blog