The pail’s progress

One of the most common misconceptions that people have about cartooning is that it is a spontaneous process–that a cartoonist simply sits down with a blank piece of paper and an ink pen and starts drawing the final published piece. While it’s taken for granted that a prose writer goes through various planning stages and repeated drafts in order to eventually arrive at a final work, the idea that a cartoonist would, by necessity, have to go through a similar process is for some reason a surprise to many. Even people who are fans of comics sometimes don’t have a very clear idea of the process.

Preferring to light the proverbial candle rather than curse the darkness, I thought it might be fun to post my progress on the first page of the “Boxing Bucket” story I’ve been collaborating with Chris Reilly on.

This is the first time I’ve really worked with anyone else on a comics story, and in this case Chris has supplied me with a script for the story–so I’m starting off with a substantial portion of the work already done. He’s pretty flexible with his scripts, though, so I’ll be doing a bit of visual rearranging in the process.

Anyway, here’s the first part of my process: a thumbnailed page with indicated dialog for each panel. I work in different colored pencils, beginning with the lightest colors and gradually getting darker, so that I can slowly build up the image I want. That chicken scratch to the right is all the scene’s dialog, with each line numbered so I can just put a little number in each panel of the thumbnail to indicate what dialog goes in each panel. (click on the image for a bigger version.)

Boxing bucket rough

Beards Ahoy!

I’ve been growing a beard in anticipation of the cold winter months.

Reactions have been mixed.

Beard-O!

Wanna buy some clothes?

My stuff for sale on Ebay

Check out the above link for some sweet vintage clothes I’m selling on ebay, including a stylish “Camaro” windbreaker from the 70s, a nehru-collar shirt, and several westernwear shirts.

Holiday card

Here’s a scan of the Christmas cards I made for Katherine and I to send out this year. I silkscreened the cards using my Print Gocco home screen printer. This time I experimented a bit and did the original image using black, 30% gray and 60% gray. I then converted the image to a bitmap in photoshop using the halftone screen option set to 75 lines/inch, then printed that and used it as the master from which I burned the screen.

Holiday Card

The return of the boxing bucket

Here’s a recent sketch I did of the “Boxing Bucket” character that I’ve been working on with my friend Chris Reilly. The character began as a quick doodle he spotted in my sketchbook at SPX in Bethesda, and has evolved into a short story that is going to be featured in our upcoming anthology “Strange Eggs” coming out from Slave Labor Graphics this summer. But…more on that project later.

The boxing bucket don't take no sass!