Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Comic, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 368

Blog: Inkygirl: Daily Diversions For Writers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: editing, comic, critic, critiquing, Comics for writers, dog, Add a tag
.jpeg?picon=3451)
Blog: Blogcha! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: zombies, cartoon, comic, character design, valentines, greeting cards, Add a tag
Peaceable Kingdom has been hiring me to create some fun zombie themed products for them. Here's the latest- Zombie Valentine's Day Bookmark Cards
Purchase here-
Kiddly Winks
Amazon
and Zombie Glow in the Dark Stickers!
Purchase here-
Kiddly Winks
Amazon
Also apologies for the neglected blog! It's been over a year posting here. All of my news now goes on all my social media links-
.png.jpg?picon=3916)
Blog: StoryMonster (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: comics, comic, byu, ghosts, flash mob, MonsterBoards, Monstrosities, kiddie bikes, Add a tag
When I was in college, I worked an early morning custodial job.
Every morning, I’d wake up at 3:30 AM, get ready, head to the school, park in the Y lot (where students were allowed to park) and make my way across campus to the bookstore, where I cleaned toilets and mopped floors and replaced lights and was thrown in the dumpster by my coworkers. (They did it because they loved me.)
Not to brag or anything, but I’m still really good at cleaning toilets.
Anyway.
One morning, I was trekking across the long and lonely parking lots.
When the weirdest thing happened.
This is me, minding my own business:
And then…
GUYS ON BIKES.
Except they weren’t on regular bikes, they were riding little kid bikes. Like, green and pink and red ones. What??
Silently, they rode past, saying nothing. They looked at me, I looked at them.
As silently as a dream, they moved on.
And so did I.
3 hours later…
What had I just seen????????
Fast forward to years later. I’d never told anyone about this weird incident, because it was…weird. In fact, I’d been so sleepy, I half-wondered if it was a dream. But last week I was talking to a couple of friends…
Both of these girls go to BYU, and we were talking about flash mobs. So I told them the story.
ME: …It was, like, 4 in the morning and whole bunch of guys on bikes came riding past…
TRISH: Wait…were they riding kiddie bikes???
ME:
ME:
ME: …What?
TRISH: Because our friend was walking to her early morning custodial job, and she saw that exact same thing in that same parking lot!!!
Keep in mind, this is years after I saw them. YEARS.
WHO ARE THESE MYSTERIOUS BIKE RIDERS????
Who indeed…..
*cue twilight zone music*
The post Ghost Riders in the Parking Lot appeared first on Story Monster.

Blog: Illustration for Kids Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, girl, Christmas, cartoon, comic, children's illustration, bird, child, xmas, song, paula becker, partridge, partridge in a pear tree, paulajbecker, Add a tag
From Illustration For Kids!
Paula's Blog
Paula's Website

Blog: Illustration for Kids Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, Illustration, kids, celebration, cartoon, mouse, comic, thanksgiving, mice, cheese, dinner, paula becker, paulajbecker, Add a tag

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, illustration, comic book, comics, comic, artists, Lord of the Rings, black and white, X-Men, Wolverine, Phoenix, Leave it to Chance, The Golden Age, Ralph Bakshi, Rogue, Paul Smith, Nexus, weekly topics, Chris Claremont, New Mutants, Uncanny X-Men, Jean Grey, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, comics tavern variant of the week, doctor strange, Morlocks, Paul Martin Smith, Terry Austin, Uncanny X-Men 600, X-Men Brood, Add a tag
This week we celebrate the artwork of comics legend Paul Smith! The 600th issue of Uncanny X-Men hit the stands this week and I was very pleased to see that Smith contributed one of the variant covers for this landmark issue. X-Men was really the reason I got into comics as a kid. In fact the very first comic I picked up and read(besides the Bob’s Big Boy comics they used to give away when you ordered a kid’s meal..) was Uncanny X-Men #166 with that glorious Paul Smith cover of The X-Men battling the Brood!
A good friend of mine at the time(probably ’83/’84) had an older brother who collected comics and he had an big, old chest full of them(no bags ‘n boards, mind you..). So, when I’d go over there for a sleep-over, I’d get to rummage through his treasure trove of funny-books and then pull a few out for some late-night sleeping bag reading! Those Paul Smith issues of X-Men were truly magical, and always will be to me. There have been many great artists to work with Chris Claremont on his classic X-Men run, including legends like Dave Cockrum, John Byrne, Terry Austin, Bob Wiacek, John Romita Jr, Barry Windsor Smith, Arthur Adams, Alan Davis, Jim Lee, etc. etc, but for me, my favorite X-Men artist will always be Paul Smith.
Smith is mostly a self-taught artist. He worked as an animator on Ralph Bakshi’s The Lord of the Rings and American Pop before working at Marvel Comics in the early 1980’s. After establishing himself on titles like X-Men, Doctor Strange, and Marvel Fanfare, Smith would go on to do more independent, critically acclaimed series like Leave It To Chance and The Golden Age, both with writer James Robinson. He continues to work in mainstream comics for special projects, and cover illustrations, while also staying very busy with private commission work.
The best place to get updates on what Paul Martin Smith(PMS) is up to and to see more art is on his website here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: weekly topics, indy comics, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, 10 questions with..., Jeremy Bastian, design, Interviews, illustration, Archaia Entertainment, Cursed Pirate Girl, Olympian Publishing, comics, illustration friday, comic, children's art, children's illustration, artists, technique, black and white, prints, Add a tag
Since this is Halloween Week, I thought how better to celebrate than exploring the intricately detailed work of Cursed Pirate Girl creator Jeremy Bastian! A graduate of The Art Institute of Pittsburgh, Bastian spent his years studying the works of the great engraving art masters and old time book illustrators. One of the inspirations for Cursed Pirate Girl was a children’s book called The Ship’s Cat, featuring illustrations by Alan Aldridge. It takes about a week for Jeremy Bastian to draw one page of Cursed Pirate Girl. Each page is meticulously packed with the smallest details; it’s fun to just stare at a page and let your eyes wander. You can read about Jeremy’s art process on this blog post here.
Cursed Pirate Girl follows the title character’s search for her Pirate Captain father on the mythical Omerta Seas, encountering many strange and wondrous creatures along the way. The first 3 issues were published by Olympian Publishing and are now highly sought after collector’s items. Much bigger publisher Archaia/BOOM has taken over on Cursed Pirate Girl and if you’re quick enough, you might still be able to find a copy of Cursed Pirate Girl 2015 Annual(52 pages), which hit stands this month. The plan is to do 2 more yearly specials to complete the 6 part story, but there could be more material set in the Cursed Pirate Girl world after that.
If you want to get the latest news on Jeremy Bastian & Cursed Pirate Girl, fell free to follow him on Twitter here!
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, illustration, comics, Marvel, illustration friday, disney, comic, alice in wonderland, artists, black and white, Iron Man, Sense and Sensibility, Paul Levitz, Disney comics, weekly topics, Chris Claremont, small press comics, Sonny Liew, DC Vertigo, indy comics, slave labor graphics, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, comics tavern cover of the week, Doctor Fate, Malinky Robot, Mark Hempel, My Faith in Frankie, Singapore Comics, The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye, Wonderland Comic, Xeric Award, Add a tag
The story goes that legendary Uncanny X-Men scribe Chris Claremont discovered Malaysian-born artist Sonny Liew at a comics convention and got him his first big break into comics, landing Liew a gig illustrating Iron Man for Marvel. It was a small gig, just one illustration, but it set the stage for Liew’s bright future in comics! In 2004, Sonny Liew won the Xeric Award(an award for excellence in self-published comics) in 2004 for Malinky Robot. Later, he would go on to illustrate such titles as Slave Labor & Disney’s Wonderland series, Marvel’s Sense and Sensibility adaptation, and collaborate with artist/inker Mark Hempel on DC/Vertigo’s My Faith in Frankie.
Before studying illustration at Rhode Island School of Design, Liew attended college in Singapore(where he currently resides) and in the UK. His work has been featured in the critically acclaimed anthology Flight and he’s served as editor of the Southeast Asian comics anthology Liquid City.
Liew has been a celebrated artist at home, winning Singapore’s Young Artist Award in 2010, but recently he’s found himself in a bit of controversy over his latest book, The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye. The grant that supported the making of that book was withdrawn by the National Arts Council for containing sensitive topics. You can hear more about this story from the man himself at this book sharing session.
Right now is a great time to become a Sonny Liew fan, because he’s making some of the best comics art of his career on the newly relaunched Doctor Fate series with famed DC writer/editor/former-president Paul Levitz! I see that more people are catching onto this series, now that it’s up to issue 5, so hopefully that will continue to happen and we’ll get a nice, long Doctor Fate run out of Liew!
If you’d like to see more art and learn more about Sonny Liew, check out his blog here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, illustration, illustration friday, comic, artists, black and white, The Matrix, cloud atlas, youngblood, weekly topics, Brian K. Vaughan, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, comics tavern cover of the week, We Stand On Guard, canadian comics, doc frankenstein, Steve Skroce, Wachowski Brothers, Add a tag
I remember being really impressed by the shots in the original Matrix film back in 1999, but I had no idea, back then, that a little known Spider-Man artist first helped bring that movie to life with pencil & paper. Steve Skroce previously worked with Lana and Andy Wachowski on an obscure horror comic book called Clive Barker’s Ectokid, which was his first major work as a comic-book artist. Before his time as Matrix storyboard artist, Skroce worked on a number of high profile superhero comics, including Cable, Gambit, X-Man, and Rob Liefeld’s Youngblood with comics legend Alan Moore.
Today, Steve Skroce is putting out some of his best artwork yet on the creator-owned series We Stand On Guard with superstar writer Brian K. Vaughan. The story takes place a 100 years in the future and follows a group of Canadian citizens(Skroce is Canadian) defending their country from an invasion by The United States of America. The 4th issue just hit the stands and it appears that the first volume will wrap up with issue 6.
Skroce has drawn many storyboards for movies, including many more with the Wachowski’s. Some of those films include The Matrix Trilogy, V for Vendetta, Speed Racer, and Cloud Atlas. He also found time to make more comics, with a memorable 4 issue stint on Wolverine(2000) for Marvel and the independent series Doc Frankenstein(2004-present), which he co-created with artist Geof Darrow, for Burlyman.
Steve Skroce apparently doesn’t have much of a social media presence(he’s probably just too busy drawing!), so here’s a link to his wiki-page, if you want more information.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, illustration, comics, illustration friday, Humor, comic, artists, MODOK, black and white, Batgirl, weekly topics, Ultimate Spider-Man, Doop, David Lafuente, all new doop, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, Batman Eternal, comics tavern cover of the week, Hellcat, MODOK Assassin, Patsy Walker, The Ludocrats, Add a tag
I love the character and attitude that artist David Lafuente puts into his comics pages! This week saw the release of the fifth and final issue of Marvel’s M.O.D.O.K. Assassin, which features another deliciously dynamic cover by Lafuente. David Lafuente is from Spain and currently lives in London where he’s working on his next big project, a creator-owned series for Image Comics called The Ludocrats with fellow creators Kieron Gillen and Jim Rossignol.
Lafuente first cut his teeth in the mainstream comics world on the 2008-09 Hellcat mini-series with writer/artist Kathryn Immonen, then worked with Brian M. Bendis on the Ultimate Spider-Man relaunch. Some of my favorite art by David Lafuente is his interior work on the All-New Doop series in 2014 with Doop’s creator’s Peter Milligan & Mike Allred; check out those beautiful pages above!
Other notable works include Batman Eternal, Batgirl, Neli Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book, and The Runaways.
You can follow David Lafuente and see his art process on his tumblr page here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, illustration, Humor, animation, comic, artists, black and white, SpongeBob Squarepants, Bob Flynn, Nickelodeon Magazine, animation art, weekly topics, Bravest Warriors, Over the Garden Wall, comics tavern, comics tavern variant of the week, FableVision Studios, Heeby Jeeby Comix, SpongeBob Comics, Add a tag
This week we honor the work of Boston based cartoonist/animator Bob Flynn, who illustrated a variant cover for the latest issue of Kaboom’s Over the Garden Wall. Flynn has been contributing comics and covers to titles like SpongeBob Comics, ARGH!, Nickelodeon Magazine, and Heeby Jeeby Comix, which he co-created. I really like his bubbly, liquid-y, cartoon drawings; they really ooze to life on the page!
In addition to comics, Flynn has worked as a character designer for the animated series Bravest Warriors and he is the Director of Art & Animation at FableVision Studios.
You can read one of his self-published comics Brain #1 for free on his website here, and you can check out more of his art there while you’re at it!
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, illustration, illustration friday, comic, cover art, artists, black and white, prints, Warren Ellis, image comics, weekly topics, Tula Lotay, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, comics tavern cover of the week, Swords of Sorrow, supreme blue rose, thought bubble festival, Add a tag
Since her beautifully delicate line-work graces the cover to the latest issue of Swords of Sorrow this week, we shine a light on the work of “renaissance woman” Tula Lotay! Working up her artwork in multiple layers of hand-drawn, hand-painted art, along with digital color/inks, Lotay spoils comics readers with an extraordinary amount of moody texture. She’s been contributing cover art and interiors to many books the past few years including Elephantmen, Zero, Rebels, American Vampire Anthology, The Wicked + The Divine, and Dynamite’s Swords of Sorrow.
Lotay is probably best known for her recent collaborations with writer Warren Ellis(Supreme Blue Rose, Blackcross; as cover artist, and their upcoming book Heartless), and her role as founder/organizer of the yearly Thought Bubble Festival in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, which celebrates sequential art in all its forms.
If you like what you see, you should go follow Tula Lotay on her twitter page here!
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Letters From Schwarzville (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: drawings, anxiety, diary, drawing, comic, Add a tag
My Anxiety web comic has a brand-new home.
I am reposting all the old episodes, edited and tidied a bit, and there are many new ones to come.

Blog: Illustration for Kids Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: surf contest, kids, cartoon, comic, children's illustration, illustration for kids, surfing, paula becker, chirp magazine, Add a tag

Blog: Illustration for Kids Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: cartoon, comic, children's art, mermaid, illustration for kids, paula becker, Add a tag

Blog: Inkygirl: Daily Diversions For Writers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: bibliophile, Surveys and polls, books, comic, Add a tag
After posting the found object doodle below on FB, a flurry of comments (turns out I'm not the only one who has a strong emotional reaction to dog-eared pages in books :-)) prompted me to post this anonymous 1-question survey:
How do you feel about dog-earing pages? After you answer my anonymous 1-question poll, you'll see what others have said.
------
Curious about my other publishing industry surveys? Feel free to browse current and past Inkygirl Surveys online.

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, comic, artists, black and white, image comics, weekly topics, Emma Rios, comics tavern, comics tavern cover of the week, doctor strange, Pretty Deadly, Hexed comic book, Island Antholoy, Hexed, Pretty Deadly comic, Add a tag
This week’s Island #2 comics anthology features cover and interior art by the great Emma Rios! I first noticed Rios’ art on Marvel titles like Cloak & Dagger: Spider Island, Osborne, and the Firestar 1-shot. Now, Rios is taking her artwork to the next level on her new Image series Pretty Deadly, with Osborne collaborator Kelly Sue DeConnick on writing duties. It’s a supernatural tale that follows Death’s daughter, as she rides through lush and horrifying lands, seeking retribution.
Emma Rios is a Spanish comics artist and illustrator who has made a name for herself here in the States as well as Europe and beyond! She broke into the American comics scene in 2008 with the Boom Studios series Hexed, then worked with writer Mark Waid on the Dr. Strange series “Strange” for Marvel. I see that one of her earlier works is a comic called APB, but apparently that’s not available here in the U.S.
You can see the latest art and follow Rios on her twitter page here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Interviews, illustration, comic, artists, black and white, fashion illustration, Wonder Woman, Wayward, artist interview, Marguerite Sauvage, weekly topics, Batwoman, comics tavern, comics tavern interview, female thor, french comics, Bombshells variants, DC Comics Bombshells, Hinterkind, Sensation Comics, Add a tag
French born illustrator Marguerite Sauvage has been invading the comics world of late and she is wowing fans this week with her stunning interior art for the all-new DC Comics Bombshells series! Sauvage is a self-taught artist who actually decided to pursue a career in illustration after earning her degree in Law and Communication. Just some of her clients include such big names as Elle, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Louis Vuitton, L’Oréal, PlayStation, and Apple!
In addition to the interior art on Bombshells and Sensation Comics featuring Wonder Woman #3, Sauvage has been very busy as a comic book cover specialist for such titles as Hinterkind, Wolf Moon, Secret Wars, Howard the Duck, Jem and the Holograms, Thor, and Wayward.
With so much great comics work completed in such a small amount of time(1-2 years..?), I’m excited to see what Marguerite Sauvage has in store for us the next couple of years!
If you’d like to see more of Sauvage’s work and get the latest updates, you can follow her on twitter here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: comic, artists, black and white, Marvel Comics, Albert Einstein, He-Man, manhattan projects, weekly topics, Jonathan hickman, Akira, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, the manhattan projects, Weirdworld, John Flood, Astonishing Tales Mojo World, Comic Book Idol, Nick Pitarra, illustration, comics, Add a tag
Nick Pitarra helps to kickoff the new comic John Flood this week with another one of his stellar variant covers. His intricate line work channels the work of comics legends Geoff Darrow and Seth Fisher, but at the same time Pitarra brings his own brand of mirth and mayhem to the stage!
Proving that artists should take art contests seriously, Pitarra was famously discovered from his submission to the 2007 Comic Book Idol competition. Apparently, superstar writer/artist Jonathan Hickman was so impressed by Pitarra’s work that he later offered him the job as artist on The Manhattan Projects, which would go on to be a multi-Eisner nominated fan favorite hit!
The Manhattan Projects, a satirical, mind-bending re-imagining of what happened after Albert Einstein and his team built the Atom Bomb, is still going strong today. The series just kicked off Volume 2 and Nick Pitarra’s work continues to get better and better. He’s also become one of the top cover illustrators for a slew of special variant covers for a wide range of titles including Red Skull, Weirdworld, And Then Emily Was Gone, Transformers vs. G.I. Joe, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
You can get the latest Nick Pitarra news & art on his twitter page here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, comics, illustration friday, comic, digital painting, artists, comic books, Phil Noto, Black Widow, weekly topics, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, comics tavern cover of the week, Infinite Horizon, Uncanny x force, X-23, Add a tag
Quietly, one of the best current super-hero series being published is Nathan Edmondson & Phil Noto’s run on Black Widow. I first noticed Noto’s work on Marvel’s Uncanny X-Force, a few years back. His work brings a nice combination of fine art & design aesthetics to mainstream comic books. One of Noto’s earliest and most frequent collaborators was writing team extraordinaire Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti; starting off with a number of issues on their classic Jonah Hex run in the mid-2000’s, then projects like Superman/Supergirl: Maelstrom and Trigger Girl 6 for Image’s Creator-Owned series.
Phil Noto and writer Gerry Duggan received an Eisner award nomination in 2011 for their original comic series The Infinite Horizon, which tells a post-apocalyptic war story inspired by Homer’s Odyssey.
Phil Noto has worked for Disney Animation, as well as a concept artist for video games, including the mega-hit BioShock. Noto continues to be one of the most sought after cover artists in comics. He recently created a series of classic magazine inspired covers for Marvel.
You can follow the latest Noto news and see the newest art on his tumblr site here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Interviews, illustration, comic, artists, black and white, boom studios, artist interview, Adventure Time, weekly topics, comics illustrator of the week, comics tavern, Adventure Time Comics, Boudika Comics, Claudia Aguirre, Daymares, esa Visita, Eva Cabrera, House of Dreams, Mavi, Mavi comic, the sandman comic, Add a tag
Eva Cabrera is one of the exciting new talents to come out of Mexico in recent years, along with her Boudika Comics cohort Claudia Aguirre. I stumbled upon their table of comics a few years ago at San Diego Comic-Con. Boudika Comics has a few collaborative books available now, including The House of Dreams, Daymares, and the brand new Mavi.
Eva recently dipped her toe in the big publisher pool with two variant covers for BOOM! Studios’ Adventure Time comic and Bravest Warriors. She has also worked on various other projects like Esa Visita children’s book and No Entren Al 1408 Stephen King tribute anthology.
You can follow Eva Cabrera and see the latest art on her twitter page here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Graphic Novels, Graphic Novel, Comics, Conventions, First Second, comic, San Diego, comic-con, mariko tamaki, Top News, Top Comics, SDCC '15, this one summer, Interviews, Add a tag
By Nick Eskey
Mariko Tamaki is a Canadian born artist of mixed Japanese and Jewish descent. In school she studied literature and writing, later on publishing the book “Cover Me,” as well as graphic novels “Skim” and “Emiko Superstar.” Her recent work is another graphic novel entitled “This One Summer.” Jillian Tamaki, Mariko’s cousin, did the illustrations for both this novel and for “Skim.”
“This One Summer” gives a glimpse into the life of two young girls as they spend one summer at a cottage by the beach. We get to see them learn and experience new things, as well as see the contrast between lives of adults and kids. During this year’s San Diego Comic-Con, I got to sit down and talk about this book with writer Mariko Tamaki. Unfortunately, Jillian could not attend.
How long have you been doing comics?
The first comic I did was with Jillian. It was a mini-comic called “Skim.” I believe it was the early summer of 2008 I did the first mini-comic for a literary magazine in Canada called “Kiss Machine.” So… this woman, Emily Pulari, commissioned these mini-comics from women who never really had a lot of experience with comics. So we did a mini-comic through that. It’s kind of like a “test case.” Kind of like a low pressure to try something out. So we did the mini-comic of “Skim,” and that got purchased by “Groundwood Books.” And that was our first graphic novel together. That was my first work in comics.
Did you ever think you’d get into comics?
I had no aspirations to work in comics. But I always really liked working on collaborations. I’ve actually done a lot of theatre, and I’ve done a lot of performance art, which for me was like a more accessible version of theatre. So I’ve done a lot of actors work, and a lot of work in sort of feminist collectives and stuff. I was really into the idea of working with another artist than I was in comics per say. But I would say now that I’ve done comics, I think that they’re just an incredible medium for telling stories. The way that stories get told in my experience in comics is that it opens opportunities to tell [them] in so many different angles.
What were some of your ideas for writing this story?
I grew up in Northern Ontario, Canada. And every summer, you went to the cottage. So it was this like solid, integral part of my childhood… When it comes to comics, especially with this one, I thought of the atmosphere. I felt the background would be a good setting for a story. And I’m also kind of obsessed with transitional moments. So for me, the idea of being these young girls, and having this chunk of their lives, and analyzing that part, and all the sort of changes that would happen, even if [those changes] were all going to be during this one summer of their lives… it was something I wanted to show.
Would you say this mirrors any of your life?
Well I use to go to the cottage, but I didn’t have any of those challenges. I used some things as a beginning point, and created something fictional from that. Obviously I was a young girl at the cottage, and I had the fat young friend there too, but the characters are not really that connected to my life. The experiences that they have are not my experiences, aside from the fact that I also did go to Saint Joseph in Huron, which is the park that they go to in the book. Actually, Jillian and I as part of our research (that’s what we call it, “research”), went to Saint Joseph in Huron, went to the cottage, and spent a week in Nova Scotia which is I think one of the best places to write a book.
I think the dialogue is very down to Earth, and very easy to relate to. Is there anything that was hard for you to talk about?
During the initial draft, it was sort of a struggle to write the character of the mother because it’s hard to write somebody who’s not talking about what’s bothering them. And I think that’s so much of what Jillian brought to that character in terms of the details. Even the t-shirts that the mom wears have all these details that kind of build up that character. And we sort of went back and re-edited [her] a lot, because who wants to read about this upset mom who’s just having a bad day? I think that’s like the archetype of the “pissed-off-mom” from like ancient times on. And we wanted to see the layers of that experience. That was a really challenging thing to write, and it ended up being one of the more intriguing stuff. For whatever reason, the writing for Wendy and Rose was for me kind of easy. Their banter was just fun and easy, and it’s hard to write for someone that’s just not pleasant… it’s hard to lovingly write that.
The kids seemed to be able to live in the moment, where the older characters were concerned with other things. How was it to show that dynamic of the two?
My archetype for stuff like that has always been the “Roseanne” show. It’s about the kids, and it’s about the adults. And the problems of the kids are not entirely linked to the adults, but their completely meshed. It’s like you have these people in this microcosm and their like push-pull on each other, where they’re struggling with the same struggles. So for me, I think it’s that kind of step forward from “Skim” to this book. That challenge of really creating a story that’s not just about the kids in this little bubble; to see these layered connections between the kids in the town, these kids in their respective homes, and all other different relationships. To me some of the most interesting scenes are the ones were something of the adults reverberate to the kids; their parents get into a fight, and that trickles down from the parents and then to the kid. And I think that sort of chain reaction is a super interesting one… It’s great to see someone on an adventure, fighting for their family or what have you, but at the same time most of our reality as teenagers is connected to our parents.
It really is interesting seeing these kids’ “bubbles” being formed and shaped by their parents.
It’s like a book about trying to be an adult, just as much for the adults as it is for the kids. These parents are trying to be adults, they’re trying to do the right thing. These teenagers are trying to be adults. And it’s all these varying groups of people that have this notion of what it means to be a grownup, and that depressing challenge of it being out of your reach.
Have you found yourself open to other avenues because of your exposure to graphic novels?
I ended up doing this short film called “Happy Sixteenth Birthday Kevin,” which is a movie about a sixteen year old Goth boy, but the cast is like me and my 30 year old friends. So I did that, because comics showed me how much I love dialogue, and I try to incorporate that as much as I can in the work that I’m doing.
“This One Summer” is available now. You can buy it online, or at your local book store.

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: animation, comic, Add a tag
“The Land of the Magic Flute is a Motion Graphic Novel, a re-imagined version of Mozart’s classic Magic Flute. We decided to take opera and narrate it in a fresh and entirely new medium. We implemented the opera in a contemporary way, into the shape of a comic and a language that speaks to youth. Mysterious and full of secrets, atmospheric drawings and animations, along with seven complete arias and a music concept which plays with excerpts from Mozart’s composition, The Land of the Magic Flute Motion Graphic Novel creates an unforgettable visual and hearing experience.”
Experience The Land of the Magic Flute here >>
Watch the trailer video here >>

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: comics, comic, artists, image comics, Brandon Graham, weekly topics, King City, Emma Rios, indy comics, comics tavern, comics tavern cover of the week, Marian Churchland, Island Antholoy, Meathaus Collective, Multiple Warheads, Prophet comics, Radio Comix, Simon Roy, Add a tag
It was a rare “event week” for me at the comics shop with the much anticipated release of the new comics anthology Island! Brandon Graham, the creator, editor, and cover artist for Island is our subject this week. Graham’s work is inspired by classic European and Japanese(manga)comics. He started off drawing comics for Antarctic Press & Radio Comix, some being pornographic(see Milk! #7, etc.).
Graham would go on to work with the infamous Meathaus collective and to creating his own independent titles: Multiple Warheads and King City. I was fortunate to meet the super-friendly Mr. Graham back in 2012 during his Multiple Warheads: Alphabet Tour and he was kind enough to contribute to my convention sketchbook!
Brandon Graham is part of a new age of Image Comics, which has overtaken the “Big 2″(Marvel/DC) in the original content department. Recently, Graham, along with artist Simon Roy, “re-imagined” Image Comics co-founder Rob Liefeld’s Prophet to much critical acclaim.
Island #1 is an over-sized comic magazine published by Image Comics and features work by Brandon Graham, Marian Churchland, Emma Rios, Kelly Sue DeConnick, and Ludroe. You can check out a preview here. The series will be released on a monthly basis.
You can see the latest news & art updates for Brandon Graham here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates

Blog: Illustration Friday Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: comics, animation, cartooning, cartoon, comic, character design, artists, cover, black and white, illustrationfriday, conceptual, DC Comics, weekly topics, comics tavern, pen/brush and ink, comics tavern variant of the week, Ben Caldwell, Action! Cartooning, Catwoman variant teen titans go cover, Dare Detectives!, Add a tag
Ben Caldwell dazzles us this week with his eye-popping cover art for Catwoman’s Teen Titans GO! variant. In addition to comics, Caldwell has worked as a toy designer, on various animation/video-game projects, and childrens book illustration. He also writes and draws a popular series of “how to” books called Action! Cartooning. It’s nice to see more and more artists like Caldwell bringing their “animation-style” to comics. It makes perfect sense since there’s so much crossover nowadays between comics & the TV/movie industry.
Ben Caldwell is also known for The Dare Detectives! series of graphic novels, The Wizard of Oz All-Action Classics adaptation, and Star Wars Clone War Adventures comics.
Caldwell graduated from the Parsons School of Design for Illustration and currently lives in New York with his family.
You can see the latest sketches and project updates by following Mr. Caldwell on his twitter page here.
For more comics related art, you can follow me on my website comicstavern.com – Andy Yates
View Next 25 Posts