Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’
I’m Back
Hi, all. I’m back! And it’s only been, what? About ten months? Wow.
I’ve decided to get back on the horse and finish what I tried to start back in 2006: a self-published comic-book about a super-powered hero called The Victory Streak. The story needs a complete re-write, and until that’s done I’m not going to have any finished pages to post. I thought you might be interested in some previews, though. The one below is of the series’ titular protagonist, in full “costume.”
By the way, I’m going to be making a few changes to the blog. First, I’m going to be deleting just about all of the prior posts and comments. I’m not an editorial writer or a philosopher, and I no longer want to write any more “dear diary” entries either. I’m an artist striving to learn his craft and reach a level of proficiency that allows me to create personally satisfying and comercially viable output. This blog, therefore, will be solely dedicated to those efforts.
Second, I’m going to attempt to install a platform called “ComicPress,” which is a WordPress plug-in designed for publishing webcomics.
Finally, I’m going to disable the e-mail notifications, because they’re not necessary and had ceased working consistently anyway. People who really want automatic notifications can subscribe to the blog using RSS or similar options.
I consider posting drawings in this blog to be part of my learning process, and therefore I’m going to cease apologizing for the quality of the drawings. It’s been said that it takes 1,000 bad drawings to get to a good one. If you don’t want to watch as I plow through those 1,000 drawings, this isn’t the place for you to be. If you’re interested in watching an artist’s growth and development from amateur to (hopefully) pro, you’re in the right place.
I’ve set a goal of drawing at least an hour per day (hopefully more than that on the weekends) and will post at least three sketches or finished drawings per week. When I’ve finished the script for the first issue ofThe Victory Streak, I’ll have pages to draw and will post each one as it is finished.
Until then, I hope you enjoy the character sketches and previews like the one below. As always, I welcome your comments and critiques.
Figure Drawing Classes — Go Figure!
Last week I began taking a figure drawing class taught by Steve Carpenter. Steve is a phenomenally accomplished artist whose work has been shown in the U.S., France, Monaco, Switzerland, and too many other places to mention. He once worked as an illustrator for Disney; he spent several years as a freelance illustrator in Europe; and was once commissioned to create postage stamps for Monaco. His art has been shown in multiple countries; in June dozens of his paintings will be on display in Zurich at the Belltree Tower Gallery. He currently makes his home in Rochester, and we’re lucky to have him.
Today was my second class with Steve. Below is an image of one of the drawings I did this afternoon; you can click on it to see a larger version. I apologize for the fuzziness of it; I don’t have a scanner big enough for something this size, so I had to photograph it with my cell phone.
Non-Rude Gestures
I think I said this post will be about a cool outlining tool I’ve discovered but I decided instead to post some sketches. Hey, it’s my blog. Besides, I think I have at most about ten readers so I’m not in danger of disappointing vast swaths of the public.
The sketches below are called gestures. Gestures are quick drawings, often done in as little as one minute. They are intended not to capture a perfect likeness but instead to record the essence of a pose.
Gesture drawing is a great learning tool but I hated doing them when I was in college. I would always end up with page upon page of clumsy marks that added up to nothing. When I began attending Steve Carpenter’s weekly Figure Drawing Open Studio in Rochester, N.Y., I ran into the same brick wall trying to capture the one-minute poses that start off the session.
I decided to buckle down and practice gesture drawing at home. I start off every drawing session with a drill consisting of 20 one-minute gesture sketches. I don’t have access to live models (my girlfriend is not fond of modeling for me, even clothed; and my cats get up and move at inopportune times). I do, however, have many reference books filled with photos of models both nude and clothed and they’re useful enough for those times a model isn’t available.
The practice has paid off. My gesture drawings have definitely improved and I hope to utilize the knowledge gained to improve my finished drawings as well.
Here are a few samples of my most recent gestures (for those wondering, these were done with conté pencil on newsprint):
Contest for Creative Types: The Anticlimax
On Oct. 31 I announced a “Contest for Creative Types” with great fanfare. It was inspired by writer/illustrator Colleen Doran’s participation in the National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), and by Laurie Sutton who posted a comment in Colleen’s blog suggesting that those of us who post there regularly could hold a contest in a similar vein. I volunteered to host it, and Colleen was kind enough to promote the idea in her own blog.
The rules were simple: pick a creative project, set a goal, and then check in weekly with your progress. Unfortunately, I made almost no progress for the first few weeks and then on Nov. 20 I was laid off from my job. The whole thing kinda went to hell from there.
In retrospect, aside from losing my job (which is no small thing, I assure you) the bigger issue for me was that I had set the wrong goal for myself. The objective of NaNoWriMo is for participants to write 50,000 words in one month, with little or no editing. The idea is to encourage people to stop procrastinating and start writing. I tried to apply that to drawing: I was going to complete four pages of “The Victory Streak” from start to finish.
The thing is, I have attention deficit disorder (ADD) and thoughts tend to come cascading out of my brain in a hurry. Excessive planning has never been my problem. It’s been the opposite. Like most ADD’ers, I’m impatient as hell. I want to immediately capture whatever’s in my head on a piece of paper. I’ve written many a story without doing an ounce of planning, and drawn many a comic-book page the same way. And I’ve run into the same roadblocks time and again as a result.
I don’t need to do more brain-dumps-on-the-page. I’m really, really good at that. I need to learn how to harness and structure all of these thoughts buzzing around in my brain, separating the good ones from the ones I should let go, and refining the good ones into something worth sharing.
For the last couple of weeks, I’ve been working on outlining the backstory for “The Victory Streak” and the first issue’s plot. I can’t share that outline with you, obviously. But I can share with you a cool tool I discovered that makes the outlining process easy and even fun. I’ll do that in my next post.
After that, I’ll be posting my first attempt to ink a penciled comic-book page (drawn by me, natch) with a brush. The page itself isn’t much to look at, but along with it I’ll be recounting my (mis)adventure in the land of comic-book inking. I think (or at least hope) it will prove entertaining.
I also have a few sketches I’ll share in yet another post. I’ve stepped back from penciling my comic-book for the moment in order to learn some of the fundamentals that are missing from my drawings. The results have been interesting. I may not be giving Michelangelo’s ghost reason to worry about his place in history, but I’m having fun and learning something.
So, that’s that. Next post will probably be tomorrow, because earlier this week I purchased “The Dark Knight” on DVD and am eager to finally watch the movie. Before you ask, no, I did not see it in a theater; and no, I have not been living under a rock all this time.
‘Night, all.
MY FIRST-EVER CONTEST FOR CREATIVE TYPES!
Writer and illustrator Colleen Doran, whose credits include her creator-owned comic-book series entitled A Distant Soil, is participating in National Novel Writing Month, or NaNoWriMo. The goal is to write a 50,000-word novel in one month. You can sponsor her by hopping over to her blog; donations will go to the Office of Letters and Light, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit charity. Your donations to the Office of Letters and Light pay for NaNoWriMo’s youth and adult novel-writing programs, as well as the Office of Letters and Light’s operating expenses.
Someone named Laurie Sutton posted a suggestion in one of Colleen’s threads: maybe a few of us could do our own little mini-contest. A light-bulb appeared over my head (yes, an actual light-bulb — very odd, but also useful: I used it to replace one of the light-bulbs in my kitchen). I thought, “Why don’t I offer to host this informal mini-contest and throw my own hat into the ring?”
Colleen kindly let me use her blog to announce this, and I’ve already had a few takers. Colleen herself then said she would join us. I am told she did this because she thought it would be funny to see a grown man wet his pants. Well, I showed her, you know — I didn’t wet my pants. I had an anxiety-induced vomit instead. In your face, Colleen!
OK, seriously, here’s what I propose: if you’re working on a creative project that involves storytelling, set a quantifiable goal for what you’re going to accomplish between Nov. 1 and Nov. 30 and announce it in this thread. If you’re doing NaNoWriMo, you already know what to do: write a 50,000-word novel by the end of November. If you’re doing something else, set a goal that is challenging but attainable, and again: QUANTIFIABLE. I will then post weekly “checkpoints” asking all comers to leave comments letting us know how much progress they’ve made against their goal. Those “checkpoint” threads will also serve as an opportunity for us to motivate and support each other.
As the unofficial ringleader (read: jackass who has no idea what he’s gotten himself into), I should have some real skin in the game. I’m going to work on my comic-book. Moreover, I am going to ask Colleen herself to set my goal for me. Ms. Doran, bearing in mind that I have a day-job and can probably set aside 15 – 20 hours a week if I’m really good with my time, please tell me how many pages I should complete by the end of November.
I ask that the rest of you leave a comment in this thread announcing your project and your measurable goal for the month of November. Then come back every Friday to provide an update about your progress. At the end of the month I’ll post a wrap-up where we can all share how far we got and compare notes.
Also: don’t forget to sponsor the awesome Colleen Doran for NaNoWriMo!!!
Now if you will excuse me, I believe I am due for another anxiety-induced vomit.
For the Love of God
North Carolina Democrat Kay Hagan, who running against Republican Libby Dole for a seat in the U.S. Senate, recently filed a defamation lawsuit in response to a campaign advertisement from Dole questioning Hagan’s faith in God. Hagan is also running an ad of her own to assure people that she is a God-fearing person.
Why should it matter whether Hagan believes in God? We may swear our politicians in using a Bible, but the laws they swear to uphold are those of the United States. The last time I checked, the highest law of our land, the U.S. Constitution, explicitly states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
The idea that calling someone an atheist is “defamatory” just shows how much religious bigotry still exists in this country. Prejudice against atheists is still prejudice, folks.
A Quick and Easy Post
My head cold is lingering but I’m winning the battle. Always do. The beautiful Jeannie always says I have “resistance” to illness, and as she does she mimes something akin to a personal force-field.
To lick a cold, they say you should drink plenty of fluids and get plenty of bed rest. So for dinner I had a beer and I’ve been doing housework. Next I’ll get caught up on my bills and crash.
I’ve nothing of substance to write tonight, folks. Brain’s fried. Maybe tomorrow I’ll have something brilliant and insightful to say. There’s a first time for everything, right?
Normally, I Don’t Do This Sort of Thing…
But this superhero quiz was just too much fun. Here are my results: (more…)
Registration and Subscriptions
In my final post to my old GoDaddy blog, I told you that registering for this new blog would automatically sign you up to be notified by e-mail of new posts. That’s not quite true. Here’s how it will actually work: (more…)





