A Mojito Made Me Do It | Illustrated Cocktail Artwork

Colorful wall art above potted plants on a white shelf, with a pastel blue surface below
Line drawing of several strawberries, whole and sliced, on a white background
Black-and-white sketch of a jar with leaves, flowers, and three round fruit slices inside
Black-and-white sketches of circular floral or decorative designs scattered on a white page
“Mucho Made Me” in white script on a purple heart with berries and flowers around it
Black-and-white hand-lettered monogram reading “A Mother’s Day to It,” with “Psalm 26:1” beneath it
Close-up of cursive text on a pale green background reading “Mojito” and “Made!”
Black-and-white aerial view of tire tracks forming a maze-like pattern in snow
Colorful fruit mocktail with blueberries, limes, strawberries, and mint on a lavender background with “Passion Colada” text
Mixed strawberries, blueberries, blackberries, kiwi slices, and watermelon on a white background

A Mojito Made Me Do It

This is my eighth illustrated cocktail artwork called A Mojito Made Me do It featuring a Strawberry Mojito.

Mojito Design Process

I haven’t been in Cuba yet, but my idea about this country is a place with great architecture, vibrant colours, cuban rhythms and passionate people.


My starting point was researching the message for this piece. I wanted to find a phrase that had some sort of naughty meaning. In the end, I decided to go with “A Mojito made me do it”, an intriguing message that awakens wonder and the curiosity. The lettering design aims to represent a drinking straw.

Mojito Lettering

The letterforms have a low contrast between thin and thicks, and an inline stroke, as well as a hollow space representing three-dimensional forms. The sub heading, “Pasión Cubana”, means Cuban passion, and it is dedicated to my friend Marta and to all loving relationships with Cuban men and women.

Mojito Cocktail Research

During my research for this artwork, I found this interesting article about the Australian Rum Rebellion:


“The Rum Rebellion of 1808 was the only successful armed takeover of government in Australian history. During the 19th century, it was widely referred to as the Great Rebellion.” Read the complete post here.


The ingredients represented on this artwork are strawberries, blueberries, limes and mint.

I decided to introduce some floral elements. I researched native Cuban flora and I found The White Ginger (Hedychium coronarium) also called “Mariposa” (butterfly in Spanish), as the Cuban’s National Flower.


“The white mariposa, its scientific name ‘Hedychium Coronarium’, from the family of the Zingiberaceas, native to Vietnam, became a symbol of Cuban flora because Cuban women used it to smuggle messages to the battlefield during the liberation wars of the 19th century. Its perfume is exquisite.”


Regarding the colour palette, I wanted to use pink and purple tones, so I chose a Strawberry Mojito as the cocktail for this piece. Sue Harrell from The Florida Strawberry Growers Association (FSGA) states:


“Mojitos are sweet, minty and icy-cold cocktails; perhaps the best hot weather cocktail around! It’s no wonder it comes from Cuba where the average temperature is 77°F with 75% humidity.” Read the complete post here.


Services

Illustration
Lettering
Surface pattern design

Original artwork

Industries

Art & Culture

Credits

Art direction & design: Maria Montes
Photographs by Mark Lobo from Foliolio
Frame by Wilma
Art Framing Concept
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