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Thursday, May 1st, 2008This week I’ve been trying to teach myself Flash. Here’s a test snippet of something I’m working on…
RENDEZVOUS IN LA CAGOUILLE ZINE
Wednesday, April 16th, 2008
When my father-in-law was down from Cleveland last week, he brought me an envelope sent to our old address, postmarked Europe. I couldn’t imagine what European would be sending me anything, so it was a real treat and a surprise to find two copies of La Cagouille No. 6—a little zine that a couple of French folks put out. I had totally forgotten that way back Gabriel Papapietro had asked me if they could print an old comic of mine called “Rendezvous.” The package contained a note from Gabriel…so nice to get handwritten letters!
Other than my comic, everything else is in French, so I’m piecing my way through. Here’s a spread from Gabriel’s comic, “Royan Sur Brie,” which you can read online if you add him as a friend on Myspace.
Very cool. Thanks for the mail, Gabriel!
WHEN WE SWAPPED BRAINS
Thursday, April 10th, 2008
Here’s a little Friday treat: me messing around with video capture and Flickr’s new video features to show what goes into carving a throwaway panel…
PROCESS: BUDDHA TATTOO
Wednesday, January 30th, 2008About a million years ago my buddy Nate asked me if I would design him a tattoo depicting the Buddha-to-be sitting under the Bodhi tree:
Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha-to-be, sits under the Bodhi tree and vows to reach enlightenment and break the cycle of death and rebirth. The demon Mara, who is temptation and death personified, attacks SG with his army in an attempt to thwart his enlightenment. In one fantastic scene, the arrows shot at SG miraculously turn to lotus petals mid-flight and rain down on him. After his army fails, Mara sends in his three hot daughters to tempt SG back to the world. Ultimately, Mara fails and SG awakens as the Buddha. This all happens over the course of one night.
And here I am, giving him a tattoo of the Buddha, but without the tree. (Or the hot daughters.) What kind of friend am I?
The real truth is, I couldn’t figure out how to put the tree in there without it totally overpowering the cool Buddha-to-be.
First, I started out with our best friend, Mr. Google Image Search:
Sketched:

I thought a kind of punky, badass young Buddha was appropriate for Nate:

Carved:
Now all we need is videos of the tattooing—if he decides to go through with it….
PROCESS: T-SHIRT DESIGN FOR BOOKSLUT
Thursday, December 13th, 2007A few months ago, Jessa Crispin asked me if I wanted to submit a t-shirt design for the literary website Bookslut. So I said, “Cool, let’s do it.” Last week I finally got around to finishing.
I really didn’t want to go for the obvious slutty-girl-reading-a-book theme, so after about a dozen abandoned ideas, I sketched this one:
Decided Jefferson would be my muse (the pixellated color cartoon is from the wonderful 1993 computer game, DAY OF THE TENTACLE):
Tighter sketch:
Carved:
Thought ol’ Tom needed a companion:
Sketched her:
Carved:
No idea whether the design will actually get used, but there you go.
PROCESS: LADY JUSTICE WITH A LAPTOP
Wednesday, December 5th, 2007I did this for our IT department at the Law School. It’s one of those ideas I didn’t have to think about very much: if you walk around a law school at finals, you don’t see students doing much but tapping away at laptops.
A rough sketch for the general idea:
Start cutting and pasting stuff into Photoshop from Google Image Search:
Draw a (slightly) tighter sketch:
Carve:
Then see a much better-executed idea in the NYTimes:
THE HAWKLINE EPS ARE IN
Monday, September 17th, 2007Corey sent me a big batch of the Hawkline EPs that I designed. I’m really, really happy with how they turned out. I’m thinking about setting up an Ebay store where people could purchase them, maybe with a little mini-comic included. Would anybody be interested in buying one?
Related Post: MY COVER FOR HAWKLINE’S UPCOMING EP, “SHIPWRECK”?
PROCESS: MY COVER FOR HAWKLINE’S UPCOMING EP, “SHIPWRECK”
Friday, July 27th, 2007

I usually don’t talk much about my individual process here, mostly because I’m not sure who’d be interested, but today I thought I’d break with precedent and take you step-by-step through a recent project I did for my buddies in the band Hawkline.
Long story short, they saw my work on Calamity, said they were putting out an album called “Shipwreck,” and that my stuff might be a good match. So I said, “Cool. Let’s do it.”
I tend to look at everything through the medium of collage: all we’re really doing with art is taking things that we’ve seen and making something we can call our own. Borrowing. Stealing. Mixing. We take the words we know and put them into sentences. We take the notes we know and put them into melodies. We take the experiences we have and shape them into stories.
Etc.
I’d say that 90 percent of my process is fumbling around in a sketchbook, 10 percent is execution. In this case, they caught me in a brush phase, so I came up with this concept:

What did Picasso say? “Good artists borrow, great artists steal?” Well, I ripped that cover idea off of an old engraving I came across:

Anyways, the band liked the idea, but decided they wanted to put out an EP before the album. I thought I could do a lot better than the original design, so I started looking for inspiration. I remembered R. Crumb’s cover for Big Brother and the Holding Company’s Cheap Thrills:
Funny story about that cover: originally it was supposed to be the back cover for the album, but Janis liked it so much she had it put on the front. But anyways, I liked the way the artwork was splintered into comic panels, so I said, “Okay, sure — I’ll rip that off with woodcuts.” I began doodling on post-its for a layout:

At this point, I thought I had a good idea of where the cover was going, so before making a bunch of artwork, I decided to finish their logo first. A couple of months back I had already doodled some logos while staying at Corey’s house. Hawkline’s sound is pretty muscular, so I wanted something stark and simple. (Something that would look good on a sticker or a tattoo.)
There just happened to be a Ketel One Vodka ad staring up at me from the back cover of a Rolling Stone:

Now, the font that Ketel uses is just a font called Bradley, that all kinds of places use:
So I ripped that off:

And came up with a final version. Keep in mind, I’m hand-lettering this:

I liked that a lot, so I thought I’d just do the title of the EP in the same font as a kind of anchor for the cover. I also played around with layouts, drawing a bazillion thumbnails:

Now that I had the layout pretty much figured out, I concentrated on the final artwork. I found these cool woodcuts by an artist named Kim Atkinson:
With those as inspiration, I finished the front cover:

Now to the back. The band members said they’d be interested in having me cartoon them, so I had them send me some mugshots:

Which I used to doodle caricatures:

I thought the idea of a band playing in a lifeboat was a fun one, so I used that and hand-lettered the information they wanted listed for the back cover:

I have to admit, I almost like the back cover more than the front. Since the cover and the back were so busy, I thought a simple CD design was the way to go:

So there you have it. Hope that wasn’t too terribly boring. Check out Hawkline. The guys have my favorite song, “Stop Your Cryin’,” [MP3] streaming on on their myspace.
ON MY MIND
Wednesday, February 7th, 2007![]()

























