Grid-22 plays with the idea of sticker-like layers. A few corners seemingly peel forward, giving the otherwise flat composition a mild 3D look and feel. In this particular grid I decided to break the rules to maintain consistency with the 3D effect. On the lower-right corner, not all lines end/start on a grid because I needed and in-between point to make it more realistic. What can I say? Rules were made to be broken.
Some people did not see a peeling effect when I showed it to them--did you?
Grid-21 was inspired by the Sci-Fi movie "Cocoon". Instead of simply designing something that looked like an oval to resemble a cocoon, I wanted to give it a more mechanical feel. I added a few lines dividing the oval to give the illussion that there is a structure encompassing it. The result is a cocoon-shapped object with mechanical characteristics somewhat similar to the cockpit of a WWII B-29 aircraft:
Computers did not always fit in our pockets. Grid-20 was inspired by old computers, especially creative renderings of them, like something you would find in an old Sci-Fi movie or classic Star Trek episode.
Grid-19 is a representation of a speech balloon. According to Wikipedia, speech balloons are divided in 3 categories: speech (smooth border), thoughts (bubbly borders), and screams (zigzag borders). This particular one is a hybrid of all three: it has a zigzag "tail" (scream), smooth borders (speech), but does not display text--it displays an image instead (meaning thoughts rather than speech).