Posts Tagged ‘Sketch’

Mood Indigo

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Back when I was in art school hanging with the DUCKWORK crowd who would eventually morph into the Comico crowd, we would compare notes about art supplies and techniques. Back then, some of the guys were real excited about using non-repro blue leads in a mechanical clutch pencil or a lead holder. The robin’s egg blue color wouldn’t reproduce on a stat or PMT which was a high contrast photographic reproduction. That repro would be pasted onto a board along with the text and all of the other page elements, and then a negative would be shot of that in order to burn a printing plate, etc…etc… The blue lead was also great for sketching and building a drawing. The blue ultimately wouldn’t show up so you could sketch and sketch to your heart’s content. Coming back in with a regular black lead pencils would define and firm up what you were trying to get at in the blue sketch. Recently I went walking into a brand new art supply store which is part of a national chain looking for non-repro leads. I looked around, but no dice. Black leads, but no blue. I asked one of the clerks wandering the floors. She asked me what I meant by non-repro. It was then that I realized that this sales girl was probably a toddler when companies started selling their stat cameras for scrap. She had grown up completely enveloped in the digital age.

What to do? I looked around and found something that is working a lot better than the old blue leads. Pictured above is a 0.9 mm mechanical pencil and indigo blue leads that fit in it. The leads are thick enough so that they give a nice beefy line like a wooden pencil, but are a consistent thickness or thinness so they never have to be sharpened. That isn’t the case with the thicker leads that went into the clutch pencils. I was constantly using a lead pointer on those things.

The blue leads aren’t non-repro, but, as I said before, we’re living in a digital age – it doesn’t matter. I can build and build the sketch with the blue pencil and then refine it with black. I scan it in and ink it digitally on a separate layer.

The indigo leads are fun to work in. I start out really sketchy and light and start leaning on the pencil more heavily as I make decisions about lines. I know it’s a poor craftsman who blames the quality of his work on his tools, but a 0.9 mm mechanical pencil with blue leads is making doodling and sketching just plain fun for me again. I love this pencil!

Of course, if they stop making the leads, I’ll be sunk. Maybe there will be another color. I don’t know. I’m not sure what the industrial purpose of these indigo leads is now if any. If that market dries up, they will go the way of the non-repro leads. I’d better stock up!

I may ink and color digitally, but I’m not ready to sketch digitally. I think I’ll always be analog in that regard.

Rumble in the Jungle Sketch

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

I had a lot of fun drawing the most recent edition of Monkey & Bird. It was inspired by the passing of  artistic giant Frank Frazetta and my rediscovery of some terrific pulp adventures via my iPod Touch and a wonderful little application called Stanza. Essentially its an eBook reader, and there are thousands of books that are in the public domain and are available to download for free! I have been reacquainting myself with the works of Robert E. Howard, H.P. Lovecraft, and thrilling to the adventures of The Spider: Master of Men! They are a lot of fun and worth it for the apoplectic prose alone! There are always blood red rages, victory against hopeless odds and a diabolical villain being thrown bodily from a tower or parapet to gibbering throngs below. Great stuff!

The sketch was done in ballpoint pen in a Strathmore sketchbook. I scanned the sketch and place it into the comic layout to be inked digitally with a Wacom tablet in Photoshop.

Beware the Ides of March!

Monday, March 15th, 2010

I was recently asked to do some sketches of Roman orator Marcus Tullius Cicero for a project this guy was trying to pitch. He needed them in a hurry, so I made some doodles and sent them off. I went to high school with the guy and thought he was all right, but I never heard from him again. I called. I e-mailed. I hired a psychic. Maybe I should file a missing persons report.

I’m not sweating it – it’s not like I’m giving away Bugs Bunny, and they didn’t take that long to do. They are just Fred Flinstoney sketchbook sketches done in front of the television. Oh, well.

The Origins of Shawn

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Shawn-1Here’s a couple of sketches of Shawn the beleaguered waiter based very loosely on our friend Shawn from Support Your Local Gunfighter. I started to doodle in my sketchbook, and this fellow took form. He could have been a yak or a sloth, but a hippo came out.

You can see Shawn the Waiter in his full color glory in the latest installment of Monkey & Bird.

Shawn-2

Dating Disaster Sketches

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

restaurant-sketch

Sketches seem to be fairly popular (well, I like them) so I’m putting a couple more up today. These are from a series of dating disaster illustrations I did for Boulder Magazine. I wish I got assignments like this every day. I love drawing uncomfortable situations and fat people. I think if I could draw angst ridden chubbies every day I would be in Hog Heaven!

See the finish here, and I blogged about it earlier here.

restaurant-galI did the first drawing on some tracing paper. I was probably refining a sketchbook sketch. The drawing of the woman was done separately with a roller ball pen in a sketchbook. I scanned them and married them together and printed them on bristol in light blue. Then I used markers for the finished ink. I used to turn my nose up at markers, but the brush markers and Micron pens are terrific nowadays. It’s also getting hard finding decent bottled ink and brushes.

Finally, the image was colored in Photoshop.

Vinny Sketches and Some Doodles

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Vinny_sketch

The other day I posted Vinny Valentine Feels the Heat, and Tina asked me why I didn’t post a sketch or sketches. I dug through some sketchbooks and found them. They’re nothing special, but I did have a brush marker doodle of a pretty cool skull-faced guy.

Mop Top Monster

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Shempenstein

…or Shempenstein. A sketchbook sketch I did 20 years ago and forgot about. Done in technical pen.

Route 23 Fashion Plate

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Fashion-Plate

I don’t own a car and wind up taking the bus or train when I can’t get where I’m going on foot. I was on Septa’s Route 23 Bus heading South when I spied this beauty. Putting it politely, this gal was somewhat grander than petite, but she was dressed to the plus nines and working it like a model. I committed her to memory and drew her in my sketchbook as soon as I got home.

The Kid Gets Into The Act

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Bunny

This is our son’s drawing of a rabbit. Mom helped out with the color and the background.

Bell Man & Beverage Boy

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Bell_bev

Bell_Man

This is another fun idea that never quite made it. Back in the late ’80s, early ’90s I was working with a couple of guys trying to dig up freelance clients in need of graphic design and/or illustration. We were trying to convince a beer distributor that they really needed to use us for all of their advertising art needs. I came up with a Batman and Robin knockoff in the hopes of getting them to use comics as advertising. Bell Man and Beverage Boy would save the day at cocktail parties and picnics. They didn’t bite, but it’s a fun idea.