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Friday, April 20, 2018

Room for One More

Chris Fenoglio

The final addition to our guest list for the Fest is Chris Fenoglio, who has a roaring comics career underway despite his tender age.


Chris is a comic book artist, colorist, and teacher. He’s drawn titles such as Goosebumps: Monsters At Midnight, X-Files: Origins, and Bloodworth, and he’s colored titles such as Star Wars: Adventures, Orphan Black, and Red City. He graduated with a Masters in Illustration from the Academy of Art in San Francisco, and taught comic book illustration courses there as well.
Chris has currently working on a webcomic called Chris & Christina. A humor strip (very) loosely based around his real life and family. You can see it www.chrisandchristinacomic.com.
You should read it. It’s pretty funny.

You can see more of Chris’ work on his website (www.chrisfenoglio.com) and follow him on Twitter and Instagram @chrisfenoglio.



ChrisFenoglioIllustration

Template 


You may have already saved this from the FB group page, but here it is again just in case: The template for making 1.25in diameter buttons. You'll print it out or just open it in your app of choice.
If like me, you haven't really thought that much about making some buttons, isn't it time you sat down and roughed out some ideas?

It’s time to start finalizing your arrangements to get things done for the Sidewalk Comics Fest. You will want to check out the Resources Page on this blog where there are links to a number of vendors:
http://saturdaycomicsclass.blogspot.com/2018/03/comics-fest-resource-page.html?m=1

In-class Exercise

If you miss class today, or simply want to do this digitally, here's the form:


 Earlier I taught you guys, some anyway, how to repeat windows and such things, getting the spacing right as the windows recede into the distance. We learned both equal division, like the windows on the left, and the "ABA Pattern,"wherein two different intervals alternates on the right.
We'll get this nailed today. It's a useful trick, that yields very satisfying, realistic results. Some of you missed that session.

See you soon,
John

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

The Brieturn!

You guys remember Brie Spielmann, who gave terrific talk last year on using the internet and other resources to get paying work and promote your art. I've invited her to the Sidewalk Comics Fest to speak on the same subject in a 2018 way.
She's tentatively scheduled for the 4-5pm hour.
A few of you may be stuck at your tables, though I'm hoping we can line up folks to table-sit as needed.
Any artist friend you invite will want to hear her, I suspect!
She's a blonde now, btw, in case you didn't recognize her right away...





This Week's Class

Saturday's class will revolve around in-class exercises. They'll be like quizzes that we get to help each other on. :)


John

Monday, April 9, 2018

Fest Update

Very happy that our Sidewalk Comics Fest guest list has grown to include:

  • Sucker and Rattler scribe Jason McNamara...
  • My Little Pony artist Katie Longua...
  • Not Forgotten Contributor Matt Harding and...
  • The uncanny caricaturing of Pete McDonnell!


I've also invited multitalented Brie Spielmann, who gave a terrific talk on using the internet in one of our sessions last year. So we can pick her brain some more! Hope she accepts.

Day by day this thing looms, if not larger, realer!

I hope you will invite your friends, families and supporters of all kinds.


Ciao for nao,
John

Sidewalk Comics Fest Facebook Event page

Friday, March 30, 2018

Comics Fest Resource Page

Hallo, All!
Luckily for us, vendors seem to get things done very quickly these days. Here are service-oriented vendors that can help you get done cool swag accomplished in the scant days remaining.

PRINTING:
http://grekoprinting-comixwellspring.com
https://www.createspace.com
ka-blam.com
vistaprint.com
SameDayPrinting.com
 (They did well on the postcards I’ve been using to promo the show.)

BUTTONS:
We'll have a button making machine at the store through May. The template for formatting your art is attached below for you to print out or open on your pc.

STICKERS:
StickerMule.com
Order by Monday Apr 30 to get their cheapest shipping in time for the Fest.

TSHIRTS:
Gildan.com (Good prices)
Zazzle.com


John









March 31 -- Character Design

Ha Hoang aka Splendid River -- Variation on Steroids! You can support him on Patreon.

Hey guys,

CHARACTER DESIGN:
https://www.pencilkings.com/character-design-tips/

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=IChyAiOAlBg

Facets of Character Design:
 
  • Research 
  • Play 
  • Experimentation/Variation/"Plussing"
  • Color
  • Shape/Silhouette
  • and in the Disney tradition, making all of the above suit the character's personality

Let's look at inspiring examples....



Featuring today :Annette Marnat -- Strong Shapes and Everything Else!

Pixar -- Silhouette

Annette Marnat -- Shape



Annette Marnat
Annette Marnat



Annette Marnat -- Shape
She reminds me of the incredible Jose Luis Agreda, below




Annette Marnat



Kristen Schmisten -- Play, Experimentation


Kristen Schmisten -- Play, Experimentation



Kristen Schmisten -- Play, Experimentation
Kristen Schmisten -- Play, Experimentation

Denis Bodart -- Loose and quick



Denis Bodart -- Warm and loose! Note the woman shown at two different ages

Unknown artist -- Shape, Experimentation, Play

Unknown artist  -- Variation



Unknown Artist --Shapes, Variation, Play, PERSONALITY :)

Unknown Artist -- Play, Experimentation

Wittig --Play, Variation, Expression, personality, all fused with shape. Wow!




Ernesto Melo -- Shape 

Ernesto Melo --Warmed-Up, very loose, strong Expression
Me, needing a "plussing"
Me, struggling


Advise me, please, you-all.


Stephen Silver -- Tips
Stephen Silver -- Shape, Shape, Shape



Tracy Butler, Shapes fused with Personality

John
Sidewalk Comics Fest Facebook Event page

Friday, March 23, 2018

Three-quarters Rear View, and Near-profiles


Circa 2001, a youthful assistant of mine was transferring a rough layout onto bristol board for me and remarked, "You know, I've never drawn someone from behind before." I was surprised and amused at the time. I almost didn't have the heart to haze him for his lack of experience. But traditions are traditions.

So what about those times when you have to draw someone whose face is turned mostly away from you? Not so easy, is it, Charlie?

The most common and most natural impulse is to indulge in a tad of speculative fakery. But this yields drawings that seem the sum of what one doesn't know, and lack the power to persuade. I was genuinely trying hard when I sketched these, but... well, I'll ask you to tell me what seems wrong with them.




Ever seeking chances to use a little research to save time and communicate our worlds more convincingly, we will review some photographic examples of the sometimes-surprising juxtapositions of features that nature hid right under our noses. Or rather, on the other side of our heads from our noses. 


Clearly, it was with such conundra in mind that God helpfully invented other people to refer to, and later, cameras.


I will seek your observations about these pictures, which again come mostly from my musty trove of late-'80s catalog clippings. 

As we go through these, let's note how far the head is turned and where the camera was positioned above or below the head's equator.

What in anything about these pix flouts your expectations?

John



Note that we have an edge-on view of her ear.

"Elvis, is that you, in the sky?" Many an excitable South American had trouble sleeping on <El Noche de Elvis Gigantico  Sobre El Atlantico>"



Jack Hamm

Jack Hamm

Jack Hamm breaks it down for you.
Sometimes these views lead to pleasing cartoonish simplicity, a la Alex Toth. 

A-a-almost a profile on Bra Lady.
"He's crazy about my kids and he drinks Johnnie Walker!" (actual headline) 





Blurry yes, but again, so appealingly simple!


Hamm for dessert.
(BTW, he didn't stir himself to give the same treatment to male heads. Are we so dull?)


Time to Work


OK, let's start analyzing these with our pencils, drawing through. Try please to infer the cranium's contour, even if there is hair or an inconvenient crop. Drawing through, approximate the how the horizontal and vertical half-way lines wrap around the skull shape. The farther above or below the equator is, the more that equator and the other dividers will be drawn curvingly.


NEXT TIME --

By request, I will try to say several useful things about "blocking" scenes, and paneling and framing decisions. Preview: I'll say "vary" a lot. 

Crazy about you nutty kids.

Till then,
John

P.S.: Since I mentioned Toth, here is a self-portrait he did in 1958. The beauty and economy of these clothing folds made me want to punish myself. (The faded-to-red lines show he was using a felt-tip pen of some kind. I honestly wouldn't have guessed they such 60 years ago.)
The casual, assured minimalism of this blows my mind.