With a quick search of my calendar I can see that back in June of 2023 (It’s January 2026 as I write this) I wrote a piece about my Three Marker Technique drawings. I’m not even going to go back and read it as I want to write something fresh about it.
I’m not even going to go in depth on the technique, since I probably did back in 2023, but I’m going to give the basics and then go on.
The basics are that I look in one of my Inkbooks for a thumbnail drawing, blown that drawing up to 6×9 inches, print it out in blue line on a 6×9 inch piece of Bristol board, and then tape the outside white edges of the paper to mask them out. That way I can draw over the edges if I had to (and I do). Then I draw over the blue line thumbnails with three different size markers. Small, medium, and large. Finally I pull the tape off and the edges are clean again. That’s the basic process. I even video myself pulling the tape off the edges and post them as “Tape Peeling” videos.
According to a search on my calendar I haven’t made any of these type of drawings in about a year. I don’t know why except that I’ve been working on other things.

When I first started working on these type of drawings they were without a final purpose. They were just me working on some images in ink. I had no idea what they could become besides a small 6×9 inch ink drawing. Over time, after I had built up a stock of them, they become fodder for some of my Big Ink Drawings.
My Big Ink drawings are a series of 22×30 inch drawings done in ink. According to my calendar I haven’t made one of them since 2024 and I only got one done that year. So it’s been a while since I worked on them. I made a whole bunch of them, around fifty, over the years and I used to look through my Three Marker drawings to find some images to blow up into the Big Ink drawings. Usually I’d redraw the 6×9 inch Three Marker drawings at 11×17 inches before blowing them up to 22×30 inches. That gave me more to work with.
The Three Marker drawings are also more spontaneous than my normal finished ink drawings. Since I’m drawing over a rough blue line thumbnail drawing with no pencil underdrawing there is no fixing mistakes. I just keep going with it. The point of them is not to be perfect but to work out some ideas for images. That’s what I usually redraw them larger if I am going to go on and work with them more. That’s when I can work out the details.
I mention all this because, as I’ve mention in previous blogs, I have a hard time getting stuff done in January. In hindsight I always seem to get stuff done but in these January moments it’s tough. I’m not sure what kind of projects and art I want to work on for the next year. So I stumbled onto doing some more There Marker drawings.
Years ago I attached two drawers to the underside of my drawing table. That’s where I keep a lot of the small stuff that I have in progress. I have three 6×9 inch envelopes in one of the drawers that hold already set up blue line drawings for my “Dreams of Things” series, my “Three Marker” drawings, and finally one for miscellaneous stuff. Last week I realized I hadn’t touched the “Three Marker” one in ages.

I had about five blue line drawings in the envelope and I thought that wasn’t enough to start with. I went over to my shelf, pulled out one of my Ink Books that is full of thumbnail drawings and started looking for ones I could use.
Setting them up consisted of putting the scan of the drawing (I have everything scanned already) into a 6×9 digital template, printing it out in blue line, and then taping the edges of the paper. It takes a few minutes to properly tape the edges so I think it took me an hour and a half to get twelve of them prepped.
Over the next week I got ten new Three Marker drawings done. Each one takes anywhere from half an hour to two hours depending on how things are going. I was going at such a good clip that after a week I set up ten more so that I could have more to choose from. That was not bad.
The Three marker drawings are really not finished pieces. They’re fun to line up and look at a lot of in a row but they’re not the same as something that’s been worked to its completion. There is not a lot of thought put into them at that point. But that is their point. Enough thought has gone into them that they make a very good step one (or maybe it’s step two). I can now look through them and figure out which ones are good enough to be made into something. It’s what that something is that I don’t know.
Possibly I can turn some of these drawings into digital prints. I haven’t made any of those in a while either but we’ll see. Last summer I got five 24×36 inch painting done. That was the first time in a while I painted. I don’t think I’ll be doing more paintings that size this year. But you never know. I might do some more Big Ink drawings. I know I have the paper for them somewhere around the studio and I always have plenty of ink. That might be the most likely destination for some of these ink images I’m working on.
But that’s what I’ve been getting done with my January of not getting much done. There may not be any big finished work in the mix right now but I’m getting some of the small stuff done.
“From small things, Mama, big things one day come.”
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got eight new comics.
Check them all out here:
I have a lot of comic books. If people ask if I’m a comic book collector I usually say yes but to me it’s a little more nuanced than that. I say that all comic book fans exist on a spectrum.
At one end of the spectrum is the collector. They buy a comic book, immediately put it in a bag with a board, and never open that comic book. Not even once. They don’t read it. They just want to own it. Owning it is their reward.
At the other end of the spectrum is a comic book reader. They buy a comic book, immediately read it (or maybe they wait a little while) and after it’s read they toss it over their shoulder never to think about the physical comic again. The reading of the comic is the reward.
To the collector the value is in owning the comic. To the reader the value is in the reading.
I tend to skew towards the reader side. I buy new comic books every week and read them. I like to keep my comic books so I can read them at a later date but I get rid of the ones I don’t think I’ll ever read again. I tend not to buy expensive back issues as a collector would but instead buy cheaper reprints of valuable comics if I want to read them. But I still, on occasion, buy comic books just to have them. I’ll read them too but I still just kind of want them. I want to collect them.
One of the big things in comic book publishing today is the alternate cover. That’s when they print one comic book with two or more different covers. Often a regular comic book can have four covers and a special edition comic can have fifty covers. That is a lot of covers.
Some people like to buy two or three of the same comic if it has that many covers that they like. I see this all the time on social media. Most people just pick the cover they like best and buy that one. That’s what I usually do. I’d rather spend my money on another comic I could read rather than the same comic with a different cover. Though I occasionally will buy a second cover. I have a section of my collection called “Bought just for its cover” and that’s where I put stuff like that.
One comic series I recently bought for their covers (though I will read them) is the 2018-2020 series from Boom Studios: “Firefly.” I am a fan of the TV show from the early 2000s and when Dark Horse made a comic book of it back then I bought a few issues of it. It was okay but not particularly good. I pretty much ignored “Firefly” comics since then.
Recently I was looking around eBay for a particular artist’s work (Christian Ward) and I stumbled onto this “Firefly” series. It ran 36 issues and each issue had about four covers. There were a lot of good covers in the series. I really liked them. So I bought some.
Most alternate covers are the same price as the regular book. Comics these days are mainly $4-$5 with some larger issues running more. That’s one of the reasons I never buy many alternate covers. The price really adds up over time. But I guess this “Firefly” series wasn’t very popular. I was able to buy various issues in lots on eBay.
All through December 2025 I was able to buy lots and I ended up with nearly the whole series for $2 an issue. I was also buying lots for the alternate covers that I liked. I ended up with around 80 issues of the 36 issue series but there were only about six duplicate covers in the lots I bought. Way better than $4 an issue.
I also got a second “Firefly” series in the lots. One called “Firefly A Whole New Verse.” It only ran six issues but I got multiple covers for that one too. All together I think I got around 100 issues of “Firefly.”
What do I do with all of these comics you ask? I’ve been sticking them out on a side table. I pick about six of them in the morning and just set them down. As I’m going about my day I’ll wander over and look at a cover. Then I’ll put that one on the bottom of the pile. I find it fun to have so much good art to look at.
After buying lots of “Firefly” I was still missing two issues. So I decided to but them online. I keep a want list at mycomicshop.com so I picked up a few things off of that too. They were all cheap comics at around three dollars a piece. Not as cheap a $2 a piece but still okay. Here is the stuff I got.
Vanguard Illustrated – 5-7 – This is an anthology series from Pacific Comics in the early 1980s. I have had the first four issues since I bought them off the racks when they first came out. I have always wanted to finish off and reread the series so now I can.
Johnny Nemo magazine – 2-3 – I have the first issue of this 1980s series by Brett Ewins and Peter Milligan and I’ve always wanted these two. I think it was supposed to run six issues but it didn’t make it. I reread the first issue recently and then put these two on my want list. It’s a forgotten comic these days buy it’s a colorful, fun, future punk 80s series.
Box Office Poison – 2-3 – By Alex Robinson this is one of my all time favorite comics. It came out in the late 1990s and it captures that era very well in a slice of life story. I think issue four was my first issue of it (after which it went on my pull list) and then I got a collected edition of issues 1-3 so I could read the issues I missed. Last year I bought a mint condition copy of number one but I still was missing two and three. It ran 21 issues and now I have them all. There is also a one volume collected edition that I highly recommend.
Wasteland – 7 – I used to have a hardcover collected edition of this indie series “Wasteland”. I thought it was okay but I decided to give the book away to one of my students (that’s what I do now with stuff I don’t think I’ll read again). In looking through the book one last time I saw this single issue drawn by Carla Speed McNeil. She is one of my favorites so I decided to track down the single issue and put it on my want list to buy one day.
Three Jenny Frisson Covers – Three random indie comics that had Jenny Frisson drawn covers that I really liked. They were only $3 a piece so I decided to get them. These are 100% cover purchases. But I’ll still read them.
Nick Fury Agent of SHIELD – 3 This one I bought to make a video. I have a reprint of the issue that I was looking at and I noticed Jim Steranko (the artist and writer of the issue) doing some interesting things with the horizon lines in the drawings. I decided to make a YouTube video looking at the issue but I wanted to see the original comic so that I could see the original page turns. It cost me $13 on eBay and I did make that video.
Nexus -v2 1 – I haven’t got this yet (it’s in the mail) but I just bought a book from Steve Rude’s website so that got me to pull out my original Nexus issue. Mine is scuffed up. It’s been that way since I bought it but I checked on eBay and saw that I could get a mint condition version for $12. I decided to get it.
There is one that I just wanted to own a perfect looking copy of. Sometimes I move all the way to the collector end of the spectrum.
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got eight new comics.
Check them all out here:
Creatively January is probably the hardest month of the year for me. Part of it is coming out of the Christmas and New Year season where I go from being really busy with family stuff to not busy at all and part of it is me looking forward at the new year and wondering what creative projects I should work on?
I usually end up getting the stuff done I always get done, such as my “Four talking Boxes” comic strip and my “Dreams of Things” covers, but somehow that doesn’t always count in my brain. It always wants to get new stuff done too. I’m not sure what that new stuff is but here is some of the “Mundane” every day stuff.
One of the basic paper sizes I work at is 6×9 inches. I buy pads of 9×12 inch Bristol board and cut those pages in half. I do almost all of my pencil drawings at that size before blowing them up to 11×17 inches to be inked.
Almost all the 6×9 inch drawings start out even smaller. Often they start as 2×3 inch thumbnail drawings in one of my Inkbooks. Those are my sketchbooks that I draw small ink drawings in to get down visual ideas. I work in ink so that I don’t get caught up in trying to make the drawing “Good” and just get down an idea instead.
One of my inkbooks has around nine drawings a page and each book is about 100 pages. So that is 900 drawings per book and I finished book 25 last year. I’ve got a lot of choices when I want to make one of them.
One of my types of drawing I call my “Three marker drawing.” It’s pretty easy to figure out why. I use a fat marker, a medium marker, and a thin marker to draw them. All of them are black markers. I actually hadn’t made one of these type of drawings in months so I just kind of forgot about them. I’ve made plenty of them in the past but not many in the second half of 2025.
In one of the drawers underneath my drawing table I keep three envelopes with 6×9 inch blue line drawings in them. I keep them loaded up with drawings ready to work on. They are labeled “Three Marker Drawings,” “Dreams of Things,” and “Random Drawings.” I’ve been working out of the DOT one for months so I kind of forgot about the other two.
I was looking for something to draw the other day and grabbed one of the Three Marker Drawings sketches. It’s a blown up thumbnail from my Inkbook printed out in blue on a 6×9 inch piece of paper. The edges are also taped over so that I can draw right over the edge of the drawing. That keeps my line consistent and I can peel the tape off at the end to clean up the edges. Hence my “Tape Peeling” videos were born.
I finished five of these drawings over a couple of days and they came out well. I’ve used these drawings as the basis for some of my “Big Ink Drawings” so maybe I’ll get some of those done this year. It’s been a while since I’ve worked on them.
I even set up a bunch more 6×9 inch blue line drawings to be made into Three Marker Drawings. These take more effort than normal 6×9 inch blue line drawings. The normal ones I just pick a thumbnail, open the scan of the page the thumbnail is on, put the thumbnail into the 6×9 inch template I have ready, then print it out in blue line.
I do the same thing for the Three marker drawing ones except then I have to mask all the edges out with removable tape. I put a piece of tape along the edge up to the border of the drawing and then trim the tape so it doesn’t hang over the side. I do this for all four sides. It doesn’t take forever but it takes a few minutes. I set up ten drawings that way.
I also set up about six more “Dreams of Things” drawings to be pencilled. I already had about six of them ready but more is always better. I like choices when I’m want to draw something. The method is exactly the same, minus the tape, except that I have to keep track of where the logo is going to go. I need room for that.
Just because I was already spending my time on the mundane task of setting up all these 6×9 inch blue line drawings I decided to set up eight random ones too. I kind of had it in mind to make some “Last Night I Dreamt I Had a True Love” or “Great Gatsby” prints so I mostly concentrated on figure thumbnails for these ones but they can and up being anything.
As I was setting up all of these 6×9 inch blue line drawings I came up with something new. In looking at all of my thumbnails I noticed some of them had interesting landscape spaces. I don’t usually do a lot of landscapes but often have landscape spaces in the backgrounds of my “Dreams of Things” covers so I’m sensitive to them.
I do a lot of 2.5×3.5 inch Art Cards and lately I’ve been looking for new things to do with them. I’ve made some abstract Art Cards and now I thought that I could make some of these weird landscapes. They were simple too. I decided that was their strength and so I shouldn’t complicate them.
I ended up drawing them straight in ink on one of the cards and then coloring them with my Pantone ink markers. The drawing itself is simple enough to draw in only a few minutes. Most of the work is done in the thumbnail which leaves time for the coloring. I think they’ve come out pretty cool. I came up with the name “Strangescape Art Cards” for them.
That’s a little look at the mundane world or going through a lot of thumbnail drawings to find the gems and making 6×9 inch blue line drawings of them. Hopefully something exciting comes of them.
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got five new comics.
Check them all out here:
The Summer I tuned 15, way back in 1981, I discovered that a comic shop opened up in Nyack NY (named M&M Comics for the mother and son duo of Marge and Mike). That’s about a twenty minute drive away from me. The next Spring my friend Rob turned 16 and got his driver’s license and it was sometime around then that we started making trips to the comic shop. I used to go to the local newsstand to get my comics but this started the lifelong habit of weekly comic shop trips.
I loved going to the comic shop because it opened up a whole new word of comic books to me beyond what I could get on the newsstand. Even when I could only get Marvel and DC comics I gravitated towards the offbeat ones. So when the world of indie comics opened up to me I jumped in.
Comic book stores usually have a subscription service. It’s often called a “Pull List” because they’ll pull the books you want out of the stack of books they got in that week and put them aside for you. It helps the store because it’s guaranteed sales for them and it helps the customer not miss out on the comics they want.
In those early days of me going to the comic shop I don’t think I had a pull list. I was probably still going to the newsstand a lot because I wasn’t making it every week to the comic shop. Or maybe my pull list was small and I was supplementing it by picking things up off the shelf. Either way that brings us to the topic of Eclipse Magazine.
Eclipse was an small indie publisher back in the 1980s and I bought a lot of their stuff over the decade. From May 1981 to January of 1983 they published eight issues of a magazine size comic called “Eclipse Magazine.” It had a color cover and black and white interiors. It was an anthology magazine filled with a few genres of stories. Sc-fi, fantasy, super hero, and slice of life were a few of them.
It also had some big name mainstream artists and writers like Jim Starlin, Steve Gerber, Marshall Rogers, and Gene Colan as well as some well known indie creators like Trina Robbins, Kaz, Howard Cruz, and Marc Hempel. It was a comic that was right up my alley then and now.
As a consequence of this magazine coming out so early in my comic shop visiting years I wasn’t able to buy every issue. I think I was missing three out of the eight issues. Despite, over the years, telling myself that I was going to buy those three issues so I could have all eight to read it took me forty two years to finally do that. It wasn’t until the summer of 2025 that I bought the three issues I needed off of eBay.
Just this month (January 2026) I finally sat down and started reading the magazine again. The first thing I decided was how to read it. Since it’s an anthology there are many different stories in it and some of them are in multiple parts across a few issues. Do I read all the chapters of a story first or do I read all the stories in an issue before moving on? I brought up this topic on our Friday night YouTube show and most people said to read it issue by issue. I decided that was the best idea too. So I’ve been reading it one issue a week and have read three issues so far.
The first thing I have to tell you is that the stuff is good. All anthologies are hit or miss but this one has far fewer misses than normal. There is a lot of talent working on this book. They were also trying. The early 1980s were the beginning of alternate or indie comics. In the late 1970s and early 1980s comic shops were being opened all over the country and they had a new distribution system to get them comics.
New publishers were popping up hoping to be an alternative to Marvel and DC. They were giving creators new deals with ownership of the comics they made and the creators also had the freedom to tell stories that weren’t superhero stories. It was a cool time to be a young comic book reader who liked comics outside of the mainstream.
One of the interesting things about rereading these comics is that they really capture that time and place. Most things are “Of their era” but most eras are fairly bland. There is not much difference between a 2014 comic and a 2024 comic in terms of the flavor of the era. But the early 1980s in indie comics were a distinct era. The mid 1980s black and white boom was another distinct era so the early 1980s indie era didn’t even last very long.
These comics capture that early 1980s indie era so well that as I read them I was often aware of the passage of time. That also comes with owning the comics for so long, meaning to reread them for so long, and finally doing a reread after 43-45 years have passed by.
When I opened up the first issue of Eclipse Magazine and saw the date of May 1981 on it I was struck by the fact that I was a fifteen year old when I last read this comic. And it was even the same physical copy of the comic. I have had it in my collection since I was fifteen.
Fifteen year old Jared could not even comprehend that there was going to be a fifty-nine year old Jared. Fifty-nine year old Jared can barely even comprehend that there once was a fifteen year old Jared. Yet here we are linked together by reading the same exact comic book.
I have a lot of comic books in my collection that I’ve had since I was a kid but most of those I’ve read, or at least looked at, many times over the years. Many Jareds have seen or thought about those comics. Eclipse magazine was a comic I read once and then never looked at until now because I always wanted to fill in those missing issues but never did. It’s a bit of a unicorn in my collection.
I still have five more issues to read over the next five weeks that I am really looking forward to reading. And fifteen year old Jared says, “Hi.”
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got six new comics.
Check them all out here:
Right now it’s January 31st and so far here in the suburbs of NYC it’s been a snowy winter. After any snow storm the first thing I have to do is clear the driveway. My driveway is a hill and it’s uphill to get out of it. Without clearing the driveway cars can’t make it up the hill. If I want to go out I have to get the snow out of there.
I have a John Deere riding mover. It’s an LT155 that I’ve had since the year 2000. It’s a bit old and battered but it still runs and gets the job done. Except for this last storm.
A couple of weekends ago we had two snow storms. On Saturday the 17th I cleared a few inches of snow off the driveway with the John Deere. Then on Sunday another inch or two fell. I hopped on the tractor, started it up, but as I went to plow the engine cut out. I started it multiple times but it wasn’t going anywhere.
Tractors in general, and mine specifically, have a safety switch on them. If there is no weight on the seat and the brake is taken off then the engine cuts out. A dead man switch. That’s what I suspected went wrong. The switch on the seat.
Luckily I had a backup. A few years ago a friend of my mother’s gave me a Toro Electric Shovel. It’s like a mini snow blower. It’s corded so you have to plug it in but I have a long outdoor extension cord for such tools. The Toro is only twelve inches wide and can only handle snow up to around six inches deep but it got the job done. It’s a bit heavy and takes some effort but it’s much better than shoveling. I was happy to have it.
The next thing I did was to order a new seat switch for the tractor. It came in on a day my brother in law was over. He’s a guy who is really good at fixing stuff. We put the seat switch in (an easy task) and then started up the tractor. As soon as the brake was off it stopped running. So much for an easy fix. My brother in law took a look at the tractor and discovered a second safety switch. This one was on the brake. Two dead man switches?!? That sounds like overkill to me.
I went inside and looked on the internet to order a new brake safety switch. This all took place on a Tuesday. That’s when I ordered. The problem was that there was a big storm hitting us the coming Sunday. A once in a decade size snow storm. The switch was coming by post office (there was no option for getting it faster) and the projected date of it arriving was from Friday to Monday. The store posted it on Wednesday but then it sat in a Florida post office for three days. I don’t think it even got out of Florida until Saturday. Needles to say it didn’t arrive in time.
On Friday my brother in law was nice enough to bring me over a big snowblower he had lying around. At first he had to get it started but he did. He showed me how to start it, it was gas powered and had a pull cord, and it started up for me on Friday easily.
On Sunday afternoon at around 12:30 PM I decided to clear the driveway. It was still snowing but there was already six inches on the ground. I went to start up the snow blower but it was about 10ºF out and the thing would not start. Pulling the cord was super hard. It felt like the engine was swimming in molasses. I was getting so tired trying to start the snow blower that I decided to switch to the Toro.
It’a a good thing I went out when I did because by the time I got the Toro out there was probably eight inches of snow. With that small twelve inch Toro it took me two and a half hours to clear the driveway. By the time I was done the part I had started with was covered again.
According to the internet a Toro Electric Shovel weighs 16 pounds. You have to push it through the snow and then drag it back to where you started to push it through the snow again. It’s a lot less work than lifting the snow as you shovel but it is still a bit of work. It’s very tiring on the arms and shoulders but easy on the back.
After I cleared the driveway that first time I was back an hour later to clear it again. I cleared four more inches this time. That took me an hour. After that I took a two hour break and then went back to clear another three inches. As I got to the top of the driveway it was covered in snow yet again so I turned around and cleared the driveway again of one to two inches of snow. That took me an hour and a half total.
After that I was done for the night. It was about 8:30PM as I finished. The next morning I went out for an hour and a half and cleared the last two inches. It took so long because of the snowplow clearing the road and pushing the road snow into the top of the driveway. The show was at least a foot deep and four feet wide up there. I had to skim the 16lb Toro on top of the pile and go across two or three times to move the snow. That still beat shoveling.
This was the most amount of snow we have gotten in about ten years. After the second time I cleared the driveway I went out into the middle of my yard and stuck a yardstick in the snow. It measured 14 inches. After the third time I cleared the driveway I did the same thing. The snow still measured 14 inches despite me clearing three more inches off the driveway. I would say we got about 16 to maybe 18 inches of snow but it’s not easy to measure as my measuring shows.
On Monday I was really tired. I mostly sat in a chair all day and rested up. On Wednesday the part for the John Deere arrived in the mail. On Thursday I put the part on and the tractor ran fine. I went out and cleared the very back of the driveway that I didn’t bother clearing with the Toro. It’s all good now but I sure wish that part arrived on Friday. It would have saved mea lot of pain and effort.
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got eight new comics.
Check them all out here:




