Sunday, June 7, 2009
Fair Fairy Fight
I found an old, unpublished pin-up I had mostly forgotten about. Several years ago, I had sat at a con by Christopher Rich-McKelvey, who was currently doing a self-published comic called Footman 15. It was a bit of a cheesecake book, starring a lady who worked for the government(?) and went around destroying evidence of mythical creatures. She was always shooting up fairies. I wanted to draw something that looked as though the fairies had a fighting chance (sort of). Chris stopped doing the book before it saw print. That makes it perfect blog fodder..
Saturday, June 6, 2009
SOrry.
I recently received an email from a friend who needed to cancel our lunch plans. It started with "SOrry." I thought he had created a clever way of saying, "So sorry." It turns out it was merely a typo.
Too bad. It would have been cool.
Too bad. It would have been cool.
Monday, May 25, 2009
My blog. And a drawing.
After I finished my last Halo and Sprocket collection, I'd thought it'd be fun to try my hand at blogging for a year. I had no purpose in mind, I wanted to do it just for kicks & grins. Well, I've had my kicks & grins and now it's time to stop my regular, Monday entries and concentrate on my next comic project.
I'll still be posting, but it's about to become more random.
That being said, here's a sketch I cleaned up a bit for posting. I've always thought it would be fun to present Halo & Sprocket as if other artists had created them. I still might eventually do it. Here's a taste...
I'll still be posting, but it's about to become more random.
That being said, here's a sketch I cleaned up a bit for posting. I've always thought it would be fun to present Halo & Sprocket as if other artists had created them. I still might eventually do it. Here's a taste...
Labels:
Gary Larson,
Halo and Sprocket,
Sketch,
The Other Side
Monday, May 18, 2009
Little Seen 1974 Spider-Man Comic!
I'm amazed at what I'm finding in my basement. First, I found some Marvel See-A-Show comics and then a Captain Action DC/Marvel/Msc. comic. I should go down there more often.This week, I'm sharing a 1974 comic that came with the Spider-Man Aurora Comic Scenes model kit. Unlike the other short comics I've posted, there's nothing particularly weird about this one. It's just nice to see John Romita Sr. artwork along with a short story scribed by Len Wein, probably my favorite writer from the 70's.
The book is nice because it's not printed on newsprint. It's not nice because it doesn't have a glossy cover. I've included the first two pages, of instructions, merely so you can see what the (very simple) model looks like. Click on any page to enlarge.

You can tell you're reading an older comic when a teenager thinks thoughts like, "Somewhere below lurks Kraven the Hunter and his animal hordes."

The small print at the bottom of the following page reads, "Place your completed Spider-Man model in front of this exciting action backdrop, for and outstanding 3-D effect!"
Ha! I made fun of the beginning of this story for using words like "lurks" and "hordes". The first two panels of the last page uses the words "dude" and "awesome", neither of which was in fashion in 1974. Mr. Wein, you were ahead of your time. Pretty awesome, dude.
Labels:
Aurora models,
comic books,
Marvel Comics,
Spider-Man
Monday, May 11, 2009
Your cooperation is appreciated
Monday, May 4, 2009
More Robin Costumes from Readers, 1977
People seem to enjoy my previous Reader's Robin Costumes from 1974, so here's a page from Batman Family #13, 1977. Interestingly, there's an entry by Norm Breyfogle, who later went on to draw Batman and Detective Comics, several years down the road...
Monday, April 27, 2009
Too tacky?
I was doodling while talking on the phone, and I accidentally drew what looked like an elegant symbol for flipping the bird. I thought, "Hmm, that could be a T-shirt." So, I made it, and am selling it on Zazzle.com. Just trying new things.I'm not sure I'd wear it, though. I would wear my Wash Me shirt.
I would also wear the Dead Parrot I'm selling on Printfection.com. Printfection isn't as famous as Zazzle, but the print area of the shirt is larger. Perfect for this bird. (And the Wash Me above.)
Labels:
Callen art,
not comic book related,
T-Shirt design,
tacky
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