Tampa Bay Lightning goaltenders Andrei Vasilevskiy and Brian Elliott share the same airbrush artist, Sylvie Marsolais. She works alongside her partner, Alexandre Mathys, who handles marketing and assists with the ideation and creation of the masks. Together, they make up the company Sylabrush, stationed in Sainte-Marthe-sur-le-Lac, Quebec, an off-island suburb of Montreal.
Naturally, they are both goaltenders. The couple first met on the ice while squaring off in a men's league hockey game and they still face each other on a weekly basis.
Sylabrush works with clients across the hockey world, including multiple goaltenders playing in the both the National Hockey League and American Hockey League.
Outside of Vasilevskiy and Elliott, other clients include Jake Allen, Sam Montembeault, Joonas Korpisalo, Craig Anderson, Anton Khudobin, Louis Domingue, Zach Fucale and Jean-Francois Berube.
After earning an art degree in college, Marsolais began airbrush painting in 1999, mostly working on projects for friends without knowing a career in airbrush art would come from her work.
"When I first started, I was painting anything that was possible to paint," Marsolais said. "We started with motorcycles. We watched some TV shows about motorcycles getting painted and modified. There was a lot of demand for that.
"So, we did some motorcycles. We did some wall murals. We did some motorcycle helmets.
"Then, the goalie helmets started. Anything you could paint, we were trying to do it."
Then came Berube, Sylabrush's first client that would go on to play in the NHL, who was playing in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League for the Montreal Juniors at the time. Not long after, Sylabrush earned the business of Khudobin, who was playing for the Carolina Hurricanes and was the first active NHL client.
Shortly after, Marsolais met a teenage Vasilevskiy, who was training in Stittsville, Ontario during the summer.
"I was 15 or 16 years old, maybe 17," said Vasilevskiy. "I met her somewhere in Canada and she just offered, 'If you ever need your mask painted, just call me or text me.'
"Obviously, when I came over here during my first year in 2014, I didn't have anybody here, any artists. But I still had her number, so I just texted her and, since then, she's been my artist."
Drafted by the Lightning with the 19th overall pick in the 2012 NHL Draft, Vasilevskiy first wore a Sylabrush mask during his final year in the KHL while playing with Salavet Yulaev Ufa. The chin of his mask featured his nickname, "Vasya," which was changed to "Vasy" upon his arrival in North America.
On the forehead of Vasilevskiy's masks, Lightning fans have become familiar with a lion. But at first, the mask actually featured a tiger.