I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got twelve new comics.
Check them all out here:
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got twelve new comics.
Check them all out here:
I’m doing it. I finally pulled the trigger on buying a new coat. Though I should put the word “New” in quotation marks.
Back in the early 1990’s I bought myself a coat. An Australian duster. That’s a western style cowboy coat. It’s long, black, and made of canvas. It also has a removable short cape on it that goes halfway down my back and wraps around my shoulders. The cape is also the part that I painted way back then. I put a scene on it of four members of a family, plus a monster, that was painted as if it was a piece of ancient art from Central or South America.
Sometime in the mid to late 1990’s I made a new cape for it. I cut a piece of canvas to size, sewed it, and put snaps on it to connect it to the snaps on the coat. I painted this new cape with a scene that had a person on a precipice reaching out for an orb with Mount Fuji in the background. This one was influenced by Japanese prints. I also painted eyes on the front of each shoulder.
In the early 2000s some of my fellow Marvel Bullpenners used to call it a “Cowboy Wizard” coat. More than once as I stepped onto a subway train the other passengers would move out of my way.
I liked that coat but I wore it less and less after I stopped working at Marvel and didn’t have to commute into NYC. It’s less practical to wear when I’m just driving the car to the store. Plus it really had seen better days. The canvas was coming apart at the seams and even tearing where there were folds such as down near the end of the sleeves. I tried fixing it up but it was never the same.
For the last few years I’ve been wanting to buy a new duster to replace that one. I thought could even attach the old capes. The problem was that the cost. It was around $200 for a new one. I had one on my Amazon wish list but I never ordered one.
Cut to this year and I’ve been using eBay a lot to buy 1990s Tommy Hilfiger shirts. Yeah, I’ve been updating my wardrobe with old stuff. I decided to look for some dusters. Preferably the same model coat that I already have. There were some there but I only looked at them. I started looking at them in the Spring and was checking in the Summer too but there was no hurry to buy a winter coat when it’s warm out.
It’s still summer as I write this but it’s the beginning of September. I started looking for the coat again because winter is going to be here before I know it and I want a chance to paint a new painting on this new cape of the new coat. So I found one on Ebay that was in good shape. I made an offer on it that was accepted and with shipping and tax it cost me around $75. It may be used but that’s way cheaper than $200.
After ordering the coat I then had to order some fabric paint. That’s paint that’s specifically made with a flexible binder so that the fabric doesn’t stiffen when the paint is applied to it. I bought a basic set of eight paints plus a colorless extender and an extra jar of white paint. That’s because on black fabric it’s best to prime the fabric with white paint so that the colors go on bright. The paint ran me around $40.
Now I have to decide what to paint on the coat. I want to paint eyes on the shoulders but I’m wide open about what to paint on the back. For the last five years or so I’ve been doing a lot of 6×9 inch ink drawings so I have a stockpile of images that I can work with. I think I’ll look through them and see if anything jumps out at me. I can take pieces of different ones and compose a new image from them. I have to start making some sketches.
I only started commuting again into NYC about five years ago and it’s only for a couple of days a week. In all that time I’ve never worn the old duster. One of the reasons for that being that the coat isn’t very warm anymore. There are a lot of holes in it (even with me having patched them) and the lining is worn away to about 50% of what it once was.
Instead I’ve been wearing a big and puffy coat that’s really well made and warm but is boring looking. It’s nice on those bitter cold Manhattan mornings but it often makes me feel blah. I appreciate its practicality but my old duster felt a lot more fun. So I decided I want a little more fun back in my commute.
I’m going to have to go back to layering under my duster too. I used to wear a small thin coat under it on especially cold days. Being that a duster is a big overcoat it was easy to layer under it. I think the one I ordered also comes with an extra liner vest that I never had with my old one. If memory serves it was an add on that I didn’t think was worth the price at the time. But I guess whoever bought this one thought it was and passed it on with the coat when he was done with it.
I think I’m going to go modern with the new cape painting. I don’t know what that really means to me right now but I already have the two others that were influenced by ancient art. I might go with a lot of faces on it. I have some drawings that have a whole bunch of figures and faces mashed together and that might be what I go with. I’ll have to see.
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got eight new comics.
Check them all out here:
A medium that I’ve enjoyed working in over the years has been photography. I started way back in my college days (the mid 1980s) when it was all film. When the digital age hit in the early 2000s I was an early adopter and spent a thousand dollars on my first three megapixel digital camera. Technically my first digital camera was the Gameboy camera from the late 1990’s but that was really a toy.
I mention all that because being into photography means that over the years I’ve spent a lot of money buying cameras and accessories. A new camera every four or five years isn’t a ton of money but when they cost $400-$1000 a piece that’s a big piece of my art supply budget. So I could never get everything I wanted to in the realm of photography but I didn’t let that stop me. My motto became “Shoot with what you’ve got.”
I like to get things done. When that comes to photography that means taking photos. Back before everyone carried a phone camera in their pocket there were only a few of us interested in taking photos. It wasn’t always easy to carry a camera with you and get people to stop for pictures. By “People” I don’t even mean strangers on the street but friends if we were at a party of some such. It took effort to take photos.
A fairly large percentage of people I knew who were interested in photography never took any photos. The time was never right for them and they never had the camera they wanted. I’d say that some of them were even camera snobs. They had some fancy camera that maybe was borrowed from a relative but then gave back. They were saving for their own fancy camera and didn’t want to bother taking photos with lesser cameras. Yes, I ran into people like that more than once back in the film age.
I love fancy equipment too. My first camera that I got as a freshman in college was an Olympus OMG. That is a 35MM SLR with interchangeable lenses. I liked it but it had no flash. That was no problem in college but after I graduated and started working at Marvel Comics I found myself hanging out after work, and after dark, with friends and coworkers. That meant I really needed a camera with a flash to take photos but I had no money for one.
Meanwhile my sister had a cheap 35mm camera with a built in flash. It was nothing special and offered no controls but I realized that I wasn’t taking any photos with my OMG so I may as well borrow hers. So that’s what I did. It took crappy photos but they were better than no photos. I learned to shot with what I’ve got.
I’m still remembering Joe Matt.
In a couple of years I got an Olympus Stylus pocket camera and carried that around all through the 1990s until the digital age. In the 1990s I also bought a Canon Rebel 35mm SLR and then a few years later a Canon EOS SLR. I had a couple of lenses for those cameras too so there was never any shortage of equipment all through the decade. But often I’d shoot with the Olympus Stylus that was always in my pocket. It was what I had.
This is all in my head today because I just bought a new piece of camera equipment. A gimbal. That’s a device to put a camera on and it keeps the camera steady and level as you move. Its main use is for shooting video.
One of the things that I like to do is to shoot video as I walk down the sidewalk in NYC. I get off the train on 33rd Street and walk down to 14th Street shooting video as I go. It’s video that no one will ever see but maybe someday when I’m older and can’t get around as much I’ll watch it with nostalgia.
The problem with handheld video is that it’s shaky. I hold the camera at chest level, use my body as a shock absorber, and keep the camera as level as I can but still the video is going to be shaky. That’s the nature of walking and taking video. Unless you’ve got a gimbal.
I’ve wanted a gimbal for a few years now but they’re expensive. Not super expensive. The ones I was looking at ran around $200 to $400. But that’s a lot of my budget to blow on a piece of equipment that I only needed to shoot steadier video for videos I never really did anything with. But I kept a few of them on my Amazon Wish List.
The gimbal I ended up buying is the MOZA Mini P MAX. There was a used one for $120 so I figured I’d finally jump on it. It has a handle, three “Arms,” three gyroscopes in it, and fold up for storage. It weighs about a pound and a half so it’s not heavy but it’s more weight than a camera alone. For that reason I found it works best with my phone camera.
You also have to balance the camera on the gimbal. All three arms swing freely but also have a locking position. I had to look up online haw to unlock and balance the camera. You unlock one arm, balance the camera by moving it along a beam, clamp it in place, and then repeat for the other two arms. It’s not hard but it took practice. I spent my first few hour with it just practicing unfolding and balancing it.
I have yet to bring the gimbal to NYC and use it for taking video but I will soon. Meanwhile just yesterday I bought another thing for moving and shooting video. At only $20 it was an impulse buy. It’s a chest harness that holds a phone and is made for shooting video while riding a bike os some such. Since I ride a bike I wanted to check it out.
There are no gyroscopes in it so it’s not really a gimbal but it’s supped to be designed to get steady video. It’s not here until tomorrow and I don’t cycle until the day after tomorrow but I’ll let you know how that one is. Meanwhile I’ll shoot with what I’ve got.
Update. I tried out the chest harness and it was terrible. Oh well, you can’t win them all.
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got nine new comics.
Check them all out here:
I’m writing this about one of my favorite cartoonists who died just a week ago. His name was Joe Matt and he did a comic called “Peep Show.” The series ran from the late 1980s (in various places), got a first issue of its own in the early 1990s, and ran 14 issues through the early 2000s.
The first “Peep Show” comics from late 1980s ran in anthology series like “Drawn and Quarterly” magazine. He only had a page or two per issue to work with so this led him to do comics jam packed with small panels and lots of story in only one page. Some pages had thirty panels or more per page. It really was something different.
“Peep Show” is named because the comics were autobiographical and we, the audience, were peeping in on Joe Matt’s life. It was a “Warts and All” presentation of his life as he showed himself as especially neurotic with all sorts of hangups. He was notably cheap, had a porn addiction, wasn’t always nice to his girlfriends, and blamed the world at large for a lot of his personal problems. Maybe not exactly the way he really was but it made for a good comic book character.
I’ve read a lot of tributes to Joe Matt since he died and most of them mention how funny “Peep Show” was and though I agree with that I’d also like to mention that it was also very insightful and full of excellent cartooning and story telling. Whether in the single page format or the later regular comic format there was an inventiveness and clarity to the layouts and drawing. Plus he had some interesting ideas and observations about life in general. It wasn’t a strip that was just about gags.
Back in 2020 I reread all of “Peep Show” for the first time in 20 years. I mentioned it here: http://radiantcomics.com/comic-binging-time/. I enjoyed reading it all over again.
Joe Matt’s work has a special place in my heart. If you were a mainstream comic book fan back in the late 1980s to early 1990s then comics were probably defined for you by the likes of Todd McFarlane, Jim Lee, Rob Liefeld, Erik Larsen, and the rest of the guys who eventually went on to form Image Comics. But I was an indie comics guy. Comics of that time period were defined, for me, by Joe Matt, Seth, Chester Brown, Peter Bagge, and Daniel Clowes. There were others too from before and after but those were my late 80s to early 90s guys.
Peter Bagge’s “Hate” started in 1990, Daniel Clowes “Eightball” in 1989, Chester Brown’s “Yummy Fur” in 1986, Seth’s “Palookaville” in 1991, and Joe Matt’s “Peepshow” collection came out in 1991 but I was probably reading him in Drawn and Quarterly Magazine before that. To read that one of them died (Joe Matt was 60) was sad and also (of course) makes me contemplate at my own mortality.
One of the things that “Peep Show” was about was making comics. That’s why Joe Matt, the cartoon character, and Joe Matt, the real person, wanted to do. I could relate to that. I was three years younger than Joe Matt and at the time I was reading his comics I was trying to make comics too. Joe Matt was always complaining about having to work for a living and how that was interfering with his ability to make comics. That was something I could really relate to.
One of Joe Matt, the cartoon character’s, defining characteristics is that he was super cheap. That made sense to me though. He was cheap because that allowed him to make comics rather than spend all his time working a regular job. When you’re an artist and life does not allow you the time to be creative that’s hell on earth. That might be one of the reasons there are so many angry and miserable people in the world. Joe Matt just found a different solution to the problem. Cheapness.
It was the morning of the 19th of September 2023 that read that Joe Matt had died. His friend since their college days, Matt Wagner, announced it on social media. That’s another thing I could relate to about Joe Matt. At the time I was reading “Peep Show” I was working in the Marvel Comics Bullpen doing production work. I was there working with a bunch of friends from college. One of us got a job there and he eventually got a bunch of us in. That’s how life works. A lot of it is about connections and who you know. So to read In “Peepshow”that Joe Matt knew Matt Wagner from art school made sense to me.
I had to commute into NYC that Tuesday morning that I read of Joe Matt’s death. I have about an hour on the train when I usually read a novel on my iPad. It’s easier for me to read digitally on the train and I don’t have to carry an extra book with me. But that day I just had to read the originally collected edition of the “Peep Show” strips. I hunted through my shelves for it and stuck it in my bag.
It’s amazing how many panels of comics are in that book. Amazon tells me that there are 96 pages in the book but it takes a lot longer to read than a regular 96 page graphic novel. Over the two hours of my train riding that day I only made it through about three quarters of the book. There is so much in there. So much good stuff.
I remember back when the first issue of the regular “Peep Show” comic book came out that some people complained that it was too much like a regular comic. They liked his jam packed strips so when confronted with a six panels a page Joe Matt strip they were disappointed. I could understand this but I liked the new format too.
If memory serves most of the issues of “Peep Show” come out in the early 1990s. By the mid to late 1990s it was comic out only once in a blue moon until the final issue came out sometime in the early 2000s. It was on my pull list so I got all of them but it became an event for me when an issue came out. I loved it but wished it came out more often.
The fourteen issues of “Peep Show” were collected in three 6×9 inch graphic novels. Those, plus the original magazine size collection of strips, make it four books. Unfortunately they are all out of print. You may be able to get them second hand on Amazon but that’s about it. The morning I read of Joe Matt’s death I actually went on eBay to check is his stuff was available and there was nothing. Not a single comic for sale. I checked again yesterday, a week later, and there is some stuff available but not much.
Joe Matt’s work is highly regarded among those of us in the know but unfortunately he had faded from view over the last couple of decades. He hadn’t had anything new out in a long time and that means that a lot of current comic book fans don’t know who he was. The passage of time will do that to us all. Goodbye Joe Matt.
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got six new comics.
Check them all out here:
Here is a bit of advice for you. If you want to be entrepreneurial then get it done when you are in your twenties or thirties. By that I mean artistically. I was around thirty when my friends and I self published our comic book.
If you’re not rich with access to money then friends are the key to being entrepreneurial. That way you can split up the work and risk. It’s really tough to be entrepreneurial when it’s only you. And as people gets older they have less and less time and more and more responsibilities so it gets tough to help each other out as you get into your forties.
I mention this because today I was working on a project that I always meant to be entrepreneurial with but never have been. I started, and nearly finished, this project about twenty years ago. It’s a deck of fortune telling cards. I’ve noticed these types of cards are now called “Oracle Decks” so that’s what I’ll call it.
I in no way shape or form think I can predict the future but I like cards in general and have always found systems of divination interesting. They are systems based on nothing real. Someone had to make all of it up. So I decided to make up my own cards and my own system.
Tarot cards are the most well known type of fortune telling cards but I wanted to mine to be more modern and different from the Tarot. I came up with names for forty eight cards, wrote out what each one means, and made a color drawing for each card. I even made an instruction book to explain the system. It took me a few years to do back in the early 2000s but I got it done. I originally called the cards “The Tourmaline Mystique” but have since changed the name to “The Envoy Oracle Deck.” Tourmaline is a cool word but it’s actually a type of crystal and the name confused people I told it to.
I only ever made one deck of the cards. I printed them out on my inkjet printer, laminated them, and cut each one by hand. I even rounded all the corners of the cards. I thought they came out well and always wanted to take it a step further and have then professionally printed. But I never did.
In the early 2000s there was no Kickstarter to Indiegogo to fund a creative project like that so I never quite knew what to do with the deck. I’m not even sure if there was a place to get it printed back then. I probably finished the deck a couple of years before I turned forty and I didn’t have much entrepreneurial spirit for it. I liked it but I didn’t like the idea of trying to sell it to people. Especially since there was just me to do it.
Over the years I would occasionally look online for places that would print a card deck. Nowadays there are a few of them. Sometimes I’d price them out just to see the cost. Then I’d do nothing. I could get a hundred decks printed up for around five or six hundred dollars but then I’d have to try and sell them. That never seemed like an easy way to make money.
In the last couple of years I’ve noticed a lot of people making their own Tarot decks or oracle decks. At least I get a lot of ads for them in my social media feeds. I don’t know how much of a demand for them there really is but some of the decks are nicely made and can go for between thirty and fifty bucks a deck. Not bad.
The one thing I never did with my deck was to set it up for printing. They were all finished digital files but they were never set up specifically for printing. Except once I set them all up as individual tifs for printing but that was a little cumbersome. What I really needed to do was to set them up as an InDesign document that I could easily make a PDF for print out of.
That was what I was going to do until I decided I wanted to learn something new. I recently saw a video of someone who set up their 32 page comic book all in Adobe Illustrator. Usually InDesign would be used for such a task but he explained why he was using Illustrator. I decided to try to set up my cards for print that way.
There is something in Illustrator called the “Art Board.” That’s basically just a single page. For decades all Illustrator had was one page/art board per document. Each Illustrator file was one picture. Now you can add a lot of art boards. You got thirty two pages in your comic? Then make 32 art boards. I thought I try that out.
As I wrote before this is a task I’d normally handle in InDesign but I wanted to try something new. Ten hours later I wished I had just used Indesign.
The first thing I did was to set up my document at the correct size and then make forty eight art boards. After that I had to open the files for all forty eight cards (which were in Illustrator), scale them to the correct size, and them paste them into the master file with forty eight art boards. This took hours. As I added more and more cards Illustrator had a hard time keeping up. Screen redraw lagged and I couldn’t always trust what I was seeing.
Plus things like “Paste in Place” didn’t work since it had no idea what art board was “In Place.” It would paste stuff anywhere. And “Paste in all Art Boards” pasted multiple things wherever it wanted to. So lining stuff up took longer than it should have. Plus there are no “master pages” like there are in InDesign for the parts of the design that repeat on every card. I had to repeat them manually.
One of the forty eight cards was a real pain. I have no idea why but when I pasted the card into the new file it changed color. Only this one card and I tried everything I knew to get it to stop but it changed color every time. I finally recolored it.
But there was something even stranger than that. Near the end of my day I went to output the document as a PDF on one card showed up. I couldn’t figure out what happened. As I was checking each layer in the document I noticed that all the art boards except one disappeared. All the card art was still there but according to Illustrator forty seven on them were not on pages and therefor could be ignored.
I had to remake all of the art boards and then make sure all the art was in the correct place. I also had to convert all of my type into outlines because Illustrator was choking on all that type and doing weird things with it.
So I did get to learn some new things in Illustrator and now can easily output the cards as PDFs for print but the main thing I learned was that I should have stuck with InDesign. After all multiple page publications for print is what it’s designed for.
I’m back from the comic shop this week and I got ten new comics.
Check them all out here:
Since I jump around in my personal art making from medium to medium and project to project sometimes I get certain stuff done and sometimes I don’t. For the last twenty months or so I’ve been working on my Great Gatsby illustrated project so that means I haven’t gotten other stuff done. I’ve also been getting one “Dreams of Things” cover done a week for about that same time which takes away from other stuff I might be getting done. That brings us to my ”Big Ink Drawings.”
My ”Big Ink Drawings” are made on 22×30 inch pieces of paper and, as you might imagine, are made with India ink. The paper is too big to fit on my scanner so I have to move my scanner out of its normal spot and on to a portable table to scan them in pieces. This means I don’t scan them often so that the drawings are usually stacked on my easel until I get a chance to scan them and put them away. If I’m working on my easel on any given day I move the drawings off and place them on my bed. It’s the only place big enough to store them temporarily.
Right now there are there are fourteen “Big Ink Drawings” in the stack. It’s the very end of July as I write this and only one ink drawing is dated from this year, 2023. In addition to that one four are dated from 2022, eight are dated from 2021, and one is undated. I have no idea why that one is undated. It may be from 2023 but I’ll have to check my calendar to see when I drew it. I just checked. It’s also from January of this year. I drew two in a row back then.
Some years I’ve gotten a dozen or two of these “Big Ink Drawings” done. When I don’t get things done in a particular series or type of medium it can make me a little sad or nostalgic for when I did get that stuff done. It’s an irrational feeling since I know that I’m getting other stuff done but feelings aren’t always rational.
In order to start a “Big Ink Drawing” I first tape a piece of 22×30 inch watercolor paper onto my drawing board that sits on my easel. I then measure one inch from the edges of the paper and use a black marker to draw on a border. I always draw a border before I start any drawing because it helps me define the drawing parameters and therefor it helps with the composition.
Usually after I tape the paper down and draw the border I start the drawing. Not this time. This time the paper sat on my easel for a month or two. I’m not even sure if I had an idea in mind for the next “Big Ink Drawing” but idea or not the paper just sat there unused. That is until yesterday when I decided to make a monster face on the paper.
Last week I wrote about doing a couple of my “Monsters of Comics” drawings. They are done with markers and white pastel on a piece of paper torn from a comic book. My big ink monsters are similar except they are done only with ink. There is no white used in them.
I hadn’t made any “Monsters on Comics” drawings in a while either and it took me a while to relearn how to do them. If I get rusty with a technique it takes a minute to knock the rust off. I think that’s why I chose to do a big ink monster face. Even though the techniques are different the thinking is similar. I was probably in a monster state of mind.
Using black India ink to make these monster face drawings helps make them scary. When drawing monsters you want them to be dark. Charcoal works well for this. I’ve noticed over the years that when a horror movie or TV show has a character who makes scary drawings they are almost always charcoal drawings. The rich blackness of ink or charcoal makes us stare into the abyss. It’s good stuff.
I make these big ink monsters using my “Busted Brush” technique. That’s when I uses a watercolor brush that’s been ruined by India ink. Sable hair watercolor brushes are the best brushes to use for ink drawings but the ink eventually ruins them. Watercolor brushes are made to come to a point but when they’re used with India ink the shellac in the ink eventually wrecks the brush so that it never comes to a point again. The brush breaks up into four or five points.
Most comic book inkers throw the brush out at this point and I used to also. But then I got tired of throwing away those expensive brushes. They cost about $25 a piece and last anywhere from two to six months. Instead of tossing them I threw them into a spare brush rack and left them there. It was years after I started doing that when I invented my “Busted Brush” technique.
When drawing one of these monster faces I don’t need a brush with a point. I’m not looking to make lines. Instead I’m looking to make multiple lines and marks. Usually when I’m using ink I dip the brush in ink and then twirl it along an ink stone to make sure the brush comes to a point. With the “Busted Brush” technique I dip the brush in ink and then mash it on top of the ink stone to make sure it spreads out into many points. I then use this wild and a little unpredictable brush to make marks and draw with.
Like most things it always takes me a little bit longer to make a monster face than I think it will. It also takes patience to make one. It takes until the end for it to come together. A monster face is supposed to be scary but in the beginning it usually looks comical. When it’s mostly still the white of the paper showing with the face only in lines it’s not scary at all. Plus the monster usually has big eyes and big teeth which looks funny.
It takes until the drawing is 90% done to start getting scary. Once the monster starts blending into the black is when our brains start seeing it as a monster. The teeth have to nearly disappear to stop being comical. It’s a weird transition and it takes patience to work towards.
It felt good to get a “Big Ink Drawing” done. Now I’m going to have to go and write the date on the undated one from January.