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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Kurt Busiek, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 18 of 18
1. The Beat’s Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: “Grandpa Con versus In-name-only-Con”

headshot The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only Con


 

Gary Tyrrell, journalist

2015 Projects: I was invited to write a short piece on webcomics that will be part of an upcoming college text on the history of illustration.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014?  All-ages graphic novels stomping all over the traditional content of comics. This was the year that Raina Telgemeier and Kazu Kibuishi took half the spots on the NY Times bestseller list between the two of them, and they are between them buiding up an entire future generation of comics readers.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Scott McCloud’s “The Sculptor”, which richly deserves all the praise it will be garnering.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? This makes me a terrible fan of paleontology, but I kinda want to see Chris Pratt riding a motorcycle with his loyal pack of hunting raptors running alongside.


@joe The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only Con

Joe Field, retailer
2015 Projects: My ongoing project, for the last 26 years, is Flying Colors Comics & Other Cool Stuff. And the 14th Annual Free Comic Book Day will be here before you know it (First Saturday in May!) There are other projects at various stages not yet ready for airing.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? The continued mainstreaming of Comic Book Culture which has been percolating for a dozen years but is now approaching full boil. More than that,  all comics, whether print or digital, are on the continued rise.

I do think this amorphous thing we call “the comics market” is more tribal than ever and more splintered, as well. It’s a thousand specialty mini-markets within the larger specialty super-market. I’m hoping for a 2015 with less friction, less victimization and more peace and acceptance at all levels of the industry.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? While 2015 will start with the first million print run comic book in more than 20 years with Star Wars #1 (retailers are hoping it will also be million selling), I’ll bet there will be even bigger stories that will affect the comics market in more long-term ways.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? My first trip “across the pond” to visit some family history (and take in some live music) in Ireland and England.


marinaomi The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConMariNaomi, cartoonist
2015 Projects: My book Dragon’s Breath and Other True Stories is still relatively new (jointly published by 2D Cloud and Uncivilized Books in September 2014).

I’m coming out with a graphic memoir about working at hostess bars in the U.S. and Tokyo, Turning Japanese, published by 2D Cloud in September 2015. The first half of the book can be read on 2D Cloud’s website:

I’m also curating the Cartoonists of Color and LGBTQ Cartoonists databases

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? Alison Bechdel winning the MacArthur Genius Grant. I think this gave a lot of hope to cartoonists, especially queer autobio females such as myself.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? I’m looking forward to finding out! Hopefully it involves more cartoonists getting the recognition they deserve, plus making tons of money to boot.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? I’m too old to bother with guilt in my pleasures. I look forward to relishing it all.


josh frankel The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConJosh Frankel, publisher Z2 Comics

2015 Projects: There are a ton of projects in the works right now. However the one I really want to talk about is Miss Lask-Gross’s Henni. Our new 2015 graphic novel is amazing a great treatise on women’s rights, religion and being true to yourself. Also the art is amazing! It seems poised to do really well sales wise which is always great! Seriously check it out.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? Hmmmm if I had to venture an opinion it would be the continued bleeding of comics into mass media. Not just with movies but also television. Another story I think more in the comic field is how women are getting more represented in the medium not just creator wise but story and protagonist wise, also about time too! Women buy around 50% of graphic novels and it’s an underserved market as women read 70% of books in general. So the main artery for expansion in comics will be women. Oh one more thing the Kirby settlement. Guess that is three stories but all important

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Mass media wise Avenger’s Two I wouldn’t be surprised if it sets box office records. In pure comics form I am interested to see how BOOM does as their market share has increased steadily. Lastly the effects of Star Wars going to Marvel will be very interesting to see vis a vis Dark Horse as that represented 25% of their floppy business.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? Comic wise probably Secret War. I dig Hickman’s narrative thrusts. In general this will be the year I get a Piecaken if I can swing it

curtpires2 The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConCurt Pires, writer

2015 Projects: Mayday at Black Mask Studios, Chris Peterson’s drawing it and it drops in March. Pop TPB also drops in March over at Dark Horse. Everything else hasn’t been announced yet.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? The continued rise of Creator Owned at all companies.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015?  I don’t believe in the concept of guilty pleasures, to be honest. Excited to see many new creator owned projects, from interesting creators, however!


garrity photo1 small The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConShaenon K. Garrity, cartoonist

2015 Projects: Still drawing Skin Horse every day.  I put my other webcomic, Monster on the Week, on hiatus while I had a baby, but I’ll be announcing plans for the next season after the new year.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? Me having a baby.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Me never having a baby again.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? Bitch Planet.


 

Rob BErry Avatar web The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConRobert Berry, cartoonist

2015 Projects: creator of a comic adapting James Joyce’s novel ULYSSES into a digital learning platform, comics professor at UPenn

BIGGEST COMICS NEWS STORY OF 2014? Funny, in 2013 I said it DC Comics move to California. In 2014 they’ve completed the transition and I think that’s really disappointing. But for me the most pleasant and wide-reaching news of the year is the settlement reached between Marvel Comics and the Jack Kirby estate. That should have some positive repercussions on creator rights and recognition for many artists who labored in the work-for-hire system and, I hope, give freelancers today a better idea of what to expect.

BIGGEST NEWS STORY OF 2015? Accepting the difference between digital consumers of comics and the regular print comic collector. We have a really good opportunity now to broaden the audience for comics through people newly interested in geek culture. But pricing a digital “hey you might like this” comic the same way you price a print “hey you should polybag this” product is just stupid; its throwing away the new reader for the profit and stability of comicshops. Somebody, some publisher or self-publisher, is going to understand that this year a develop a product for mass consumption online and very, very solid sales in paperback. Comics are quick reads and, as such, really solid selling ephemeral products; that’s their history. But that doesn’t mean people won’t pay very solid dollar amounts for the collected editions, the prestige object. The new product that understands and adapts to that market mathematic is going to win the day.

GUILTY PLEASURE OF 2015? The 50th anniversary of the Reed and Sue’s wedding in FANTASTIC FOUR ANNUAL  #3 (October, 1965). To my mind that’s the first watermark of “the Marvel Age” and its something I’ve personally toyed with in sketchbooks for years and years. I wonder how Marvel will handle it? Like most guilty pleasures, I look forward to the disappointment I know will follow it.


JenSorensen The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only Con

Jen Sorensen, cartoonist, jensorensen.com and  fusion.net/GraphicCulture

2015 Projects: I’ve recently begun working as Comics Editor for Fusion, a startup media company from ABC and Univision aimed at socially-conscious young adults. I’m curating political cartoons and graphic journalism for a section of the website called “Graphic Culture”. It’s a dream job, and I’m super-excited about building the section further in 2015 — the whole website is still in Beta. We’ve published some great stuff already that I’m very proud of!

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? The return of Bill Watterson

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? I’m a bit biased here, but I would like it to be about the growth in popularity of socially-relevant comics in digital news media.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? More Serial. And cheese, of the edible variety.


 The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConMK Reed, writer, mkreed.comaboutabull.comcutegirlnetwork.com

2015 Projects: My webcomic, About A Bull; everything else to be revealed in 2015.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? How many freaking amazing comics came out this year! The Wrenchies, Seconds, Through The Woods, How To Be Happy, Beautiful Darkness & Beauty- SO MUCH great stuff came out this year. Not even going into all the awesome webcomics & minis coming out.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Raina Telgemeier has the 5 top books on the NY Times Comics Bestsellers list.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? Being able to talk about my own projects again. <_<


 

 The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConBen Towle, cartoonist

2015 Projects: I couldn’t me more excited that my webcomic, Oyster War, that I’ve been working on for the last few years will be coming out as a print graphic novel in the second half of 2015. I don’t think the publisher’s going to make an official announcement until the spring, but keep an eye out for it in the coming year!

While that’s moving into production, I’m getting a few proposals together that will hopefully find a home somewhere in 2015.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? The Kirby settlement. Obviously this long-running dispute just being finally over with is a big deal in and of itself, but it’s even more notable that it was settled out of court rather than adjudicated. We’ll never know how SCOTUS would have ruled on this one, but clearly Disney/Marvel had some qualms about the possible outcome. Personally, I’d have really liked to have seen it go to the Supreme Court, but just seeing “Created by Jack Kirby” on Marvel properties makes this a huge deal.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Well, maybe not “big,” but important. I’m wondering if 2015 won’t be the beginning of the end for the ever expanding “con-a-weekend” trend. I think we’re soon going to reach a breaking point where the number of comics/pop culture cons each year are just non-sustainable and some are going to have to hang it up.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? I’m generally all about those comics, ’bout those comics, no music… but I’m pretty psyched for Mad Max: Fury Road. I’m pretty sure the film will feature some cars that explode.


Kurt Busiek destaque The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only Con

Kurt Busiek, writer

2015 Projects: ASTRO CITY, with Brent Anderson, Alex Ross, Alex Sinclair, Wendy Broome and JG Roshell and THE AUTUMNLANDS: TOOTH & CLAW with Benjamin Dewey, Jordie Bellaire and JG Roshell again.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? Spider-Woman’s butt!

No, Thor’s a girl!

The Marvel-Kirby settlement?

I dunno. I haven’t had the energy to pay attention. Biggest news for me has been Image’s continued growth and strength with creator-owned books. So I’ll vote for that, but when the results come out I’m sure it’ll be something I haven’t thought of.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Fallout from DC’s West Coast move. But again, I’m sure I’m going to be wrong.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? WALT & SKEEZIX Book 6!

Not that I’ll feel guilty about it. But I don’t feel guilty about much, in comics. Pleasure, though? You bet.


Glenn Hauman for Heidi The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConGlenn Hauman, journalist

2015 Projects: All of the stuff from ComicMix Pro Services, doing all the things that comics creators don’t want to deal with or don’t know how to do. http://www.comicmix.com/pro-services/ There are so many neat projects coming up in the next year…

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? Comics seriously go Hollywood. It’s finally here— DC people are packing up their apartments, selling their houses, and leaving for sunny Burbank. Meanwhile, there are twenty, count them, twenty TV series based on comic books in production right now, never mind all the movies. The infrastructure of Hollywood is relying on comics in a way that they never have before.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Not all of the comics adaptations are going to succeed. Amazingly, this is going to surprise a number of TV and movie executives.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? I don’t feel guilty about ANY of my pleasures, beatniks— I just don’t admit them all in public.


mark siegel The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConMark Siegel, publisher/cartoonist, First Second

2015 Projects: PIGS MIGHT FLY, by Nick Abadzis, with artwork by Jerel Dye. Because every second I spend in their world makes me happy.

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? THIS ONE SUMMER by Jillian and Mariko Tamaki, getting an unprecedented seven starred reviews.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? Something nobody saw coming. The death of an iconic creator. The redemption of another.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015?  Upgrading my Valkyries.


amychu2 The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConAmy Chu, writer

2015 Projects: Vertigo Strange Sports Stories, Geek Girl’s Guide to Making Comics, Girls Night Out #4

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? The rise of female readership in comics and their influence on content– Ms. Marvel, Gotham Academy, Batgirl

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? The DC Convergence event

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? Binge watching Orphan Black and binge playing Final Fantasy.


 

jimmie robinson The Beats Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: Grandpa Con versus In name only ConJimmie Robinson, cartoonist

2015 Projects: THE EMPTY, by Image Comics

What was the biggest story in comics in 2014? The changing landscape of comic conventions in North America.  How they have affected professionals, cosplayers, retailers, the industry and how the average Joe on the street might view fandom in today’s world.  The media lens, via TV, Movies, News, the Internet, etc. is like a genie out of the bottle.  It won’t go back in and we all have multiple wishes for what we hope will be the best for everyone.  Nonetheless, some people may not transition well during this time.  That’s a story as old as the invention of the wheel, but I personally don’t mind the change and I welcome the fans, readers and guests on every level.  Conventions have never been about making money for me, but I know it is for some. I’m happy to just break even, if that.  I tend to look at conventions as opportunities for the future, such as making connections in the industry for future work, making connections with fans of my existing work and enjoying the community at large.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2015? I’m predicting more fall out of Grandpa Con versus In-name-only-Con. In fact, I predict the return of the 1990s style comics.  The boom of the 1990s will become the new childhood nostalgia and cool retro style of tomorrow.  Hyper stylized characters, buxom women, giant laser guns, and splash pages will become the rage.  We will experience a backlash of all the deep-meaning and well-thought out comics of today.  Readers will crave something different from the the alternative comics.  In short, the pendulum continues to swing back and forth.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2015? I am very much looking forward to San Diego Comic Con.  2015 marks my official 20th year in comics as a professional and this upcoming year San Diego has invited me as one of their guests — which will personally be a real honor.

 

1 Comments on The Beat’s Annual Survey 2015, Part Four: “Grandpa Con versus In-name-only-Con”, last added: 1/9/2015
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2. On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey

 

 

At the summer Image Expo one of the most notable announcements was Tooth and Claw by Kurt Busiek and Ben Dewey. Not only did it mark the return of Busiek with a new comic for the first time in years, but Dewey’s art looked amazing. The story involves high fantasy, with animal protagonists and Game of Thrones level intrigue. The first issue is on sale today in a bargain format: just $2.99 for 40 pages of story. As you can see from the preview pagesk, this is one spectacular comic.

One of the best things comics do is world-building and this looks to be a strong examples of that by Busiek and Dewey.

ToothandClaw01 Page1 On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey ToothandClaw01 Page2 On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey ToothandClaw01 Page3 On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey ToothandClaw01 Page4 On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey ToothandClaw01 Page5 On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey ToothandClaw01 Page6 On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey

1 Comments on On Sale Today Preview: Tooth and Claw #1 by Busiek and Dewey, last added: 11/6/2014
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3. Kurt Busiek and Brent Anderson’s Astro City Returns!

DC have announced that Kurt Busiek and Brent Anderson’s Astro City will be returning in June! Oh, and look who’s doing the covers:

Astro City 1 Kurt Busiek and Brent Andersons Astro City Returns!

This will be an ongoing series from the creative team, starting with a shiny new issue #1. The press release notes that returning characters such as Samaritan and Honor Guard will be joined by new characters – a new character called ‘Broken Man’ appears to be the centre for the new story. This marks Busiek’s long-awaited return to comics after a too-long hiatus. And actually, let’s just listen to what he has to say, as part of the announcement interview with MTV Geek:

It’ll be an ongoing monthly, open-ended series. Since there isn’t a single ongoing lead character or team, it’s not really a case of the series following a particular set of adventures — we’ll be exploring the people of the city and the superhero genre, as before, and seeing what kind of stories we can tell that you just can’t get anywhere else, stories ranging from a day in the life of a sorcerer’s assistant to the ongoing relationship between Samaritan and Winged Victory, and more.

We have plans to visit other planets, to reveal more about Astro City’s past, to explore the life of super-powered people who never chose to become heroes or villains, and lots more. I even intend to finally get to my talking gorilla story

 

14 Comments on Kurt Busiek and Brent Anderson’s Astro City Returns!, last added: 3/8/2013
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4. Kurt Busiek is winning it on Formspring now

201206111247 Kurt Busiek is winning it on Formspring now
While laid up with medical issues that preclude him doing serious writing, Kurt Busiek has set up a Formspring account, and, as you could extrapolate from reading his calm, well-reasoned* answers here at The Beat, there’s lots of info:

Q: who was your experience like working on wonder woman? People say it’s a hard character to get a handle on because there really is no core to fall back on like Batman or Superman. Would you like to try an extended run with her?

A: I’d like to work on my own stuff for now, but I had fun working with the character whenever I got to write her, and have never had trouble getting a handle on her. I think she’s got plenty of core. Were I to do an extended run on a character I didn’t own again, and I had the right kind of artist and the editorial freedom to do it my way instead of someone else’s, then sure, it’d be a blast.

And if you’re wondering who “the right kind of artist” would be, well, imagine someone who can draw a kick-ass THOR run, with all that mythic majesty and action and monsters and such. Plus good character acting. Bam.


More on Supergirl, Astro City (it has been delayed by his medical issues,) and so on.

*Note, usually when we use the phrase “calm, well-reasoned” it is in the sarcastic sense. Not here.

5 Comments on Kurt Busiek is winning it on Formspring now, last added: 6/11/2012
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5. What Kurt Said

So Kurt Busiek wrote about Odd and the Frost Giants, and I linked to it here and he emailed me, and I needed to ask him if I could use a bit of something he and I plotted on a long car journey about 12 years ago for a mystery project, and he said yes, and I sent him The Graveyard Book as a thank you.

He wrote about it, too:


THE GRAVEYARD BOOK's title is an homage to THE JUNGLE BOOK, since TGB is about a boy whose family dies, and who winds up being raised in a graveyard, by ghosts, and the other things that lurk there.

The boy, named Nobody ("Bod" for short), learns many things, discovers odd places and curious people, deals hesitantly with the world outside the graveyard and eventually has to deal with the forces that killed the rest of his family, and who are still looking for him. I won't say much more about the plot, because hey, it's not going to be out for months.

But I think it's likely Neil's best novel yet. It has a great deal of warmth, whimsy, dark fantasy (verging on horror), adventure, charm, suspense, monsters, ghouls, a witch, school bullies, policemen, ancient burial mounds, knife-wielding killers, dancing, mystery, trouble, a dash of romance, life lessons, and a creature named Silas, who is both what he seems to be and not. And the most endearingly dangerous and threatening ancient terror you've ever met. The story's engaging, there's a real sense of menace, and it builds to a strong and satisfying climax.

The ghosts are a delight, and the sense of magic and possibility and things happening in the shadows is compelling and attractive. The writing is quite good, but not showy -- the story and characters take first place, always.

It's a short novel, under 70,000 words, and it works as YA, provided you don't mind YA books starting with dead bodies (including a child), bloody knives and a toddler in jeopardy, but it's not limited to that -- it's a book that'll be as satisfying for an adult to read as for a young teen, but they'll get different things out of it.

It's more in company with STARDUST and NEVERWHERE, in that it's an occasionally-dark fantasy involving a world one step outside our own, than with AMERICAN GODS and ANANSI BOYS (which are more about stuff intruding from the beyonds into our own), but written by someone who's had that much more practice than any of those. I could say it's "like GOOD OMENS meets A FINE AND PRIVATE PLACE" but, well, that's a facile and shallow comparison, so I won't.

In any case, this is a wholehearted recommendation. I like most of what Neil writes, but THE GRAVEYARD BOOK is very high up on the list, even so.

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6.


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7.

Papercraft skull

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8. Halloween Craft Ideas from

Heidi Kenney

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9. Scrap Paper Lunar Egret

I've started making piles of my scrap paper and doing little pictures on them. I've been so busy working on contract work that I never seem to have time to to play and try new things. I'd like to keep this up. I used every medium in reach; water colour, gouache, acrylic, colour pencil, oil pastel. I also tried something new to me called Aquapasto which is like a retarder, it's a gum arabic and silica mix. Many of my favorite pieces started on loose bits of scrap paper that were floating around my studio, the Castle picture for example. What does everyone else do with their scrap paper?

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10. Vintage French and Belgian…


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11. From RobertSabuda.com


Pop-Ups by Kids

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12. Painting on to different materials // Festés különböző papírokra

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13. The Paper Quilt Project

" Geisha- A Day in My Life"

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14. Andrea Dezsö

"Andrea's large-scale public art mosaic can be seen in the Bedford Park Blvd subway station <#4 train> in NYC. The mosaic was commissioned by the MTA Arts for Transit and was fabricated by Miotto Mosaics."

http://a.parsons.edu/~andi/ART_mosaic1.html


Make sure to take a look at these Paper Cuts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7


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15. I am thrilled to be a participating artist in the...

I am thrilled to be a participating artist in the " Paper Quilt Project" for the month of July, 2007, organized by Dawbis who is also an artist/environmentalist. I've just completed my "quilt" and will be sending it off in the mail tomorrow. The papers below are most of what I was sent in order to complete the project entitled, "A Day in My Life." The rest of the papers have already been used in the piece above. Whatever I created with these papers was of my own choosing.

It is important to note that the paper layout is only 3.5 x 5". The scraps are also this size or smaller so one needs to work very small in order to complete the project.

I am fascinated by the Japanese and their culture and the stories of the Geisha. The most recent movie, "Memoires of a Geisha" comes to mind. Though I have never wanted to be one, I have tried to capture the essence of "Geisha-A Day in My Life" in my paper collage.

For more artist's works at the Paper Quilt Project and/or if you would like to be a part of the project visit Flickr.

Dawbis, I popped it in the mail today and it's on its way to you!

8 Comments on I am thrilled to be a participating artist in the..., last added: 7/17/2007
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16. It's a Paper Toy Zeitgeist


Paper Toys

All of a sudden, I'm seeing paper toys everywhere. They're great because you can just download a PDF, cut out the pieces and put them together to make an instant desk accessory. Here's a cute bunny toy I found on Craftzine.com, a lucky bamboo plant found on How About Orange and an elephant found on Paper Forest. --MEGAN AT www.howdesign.com/blog/

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17. Ana Ventura's Paper Dolls (Thanks to www.redfish...

Ana Ventura's Paper Dolls

(Thanks to www.redfishcircle.blogspot.com/ for the link!)

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18. I Can WRITE!

I was beginning to wonder if I ever really would write any more, but yesterday I DID. And it wasn't all that hard, after I made myself sit down and do it. Might even try it again today...

I spent the whole day (9 AM to 7:30 PM) at the hospital with a friend who had to go in for a procedure--I figured three or four hours--but the doctor was three hours late, and THEN they told us she had to lay flat without bending her leg for four hours...Anyway, I had gone prepared. Figured there would be no interuptions there, and nothing to distract me, so I packed my pads of paper and a couple of mechanical pencils and set off. Didn't know where I was going with the story, but managed to get six pages written. Now if I will only do that for the next several days, the book will be finished and ready for revisions. And with such a good critique group now, I really need to finish it before I get far along enough to need it to post!

Another Little Grandson day. Today we played all sorts of ball games outside, and played with the playdough, as well as having a puppet show and reading a story and playing a long game of concentration...which he won hands down. Amazing, though, how many rules there are to our ball games, and how quickly they can change. :-)

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