Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Bowling End Days

The Bowling Hall of Fame in downtown St. Louis closed its doors last week. Here's an illustration I made on the eve of apocalypse, published in the Riverfront Times. If you follow my blog (or my LIFE) you know how much I love bowling so this was a sad day. I don't know how I resisted the urge to draw a(nother) bowling hot rod based on this exhibit:but I stuck to my sketch pretty closely on this one.Bowling has a long and storied history in St. Louis. MAYBE YOU CAN HELP ME? I'm working on a comic about the legendary Budweisers, the legendary STL bowling team that shattered the five-man team record back in the '50's. I'm looking for any sort of reference or writing about that night in 1958, particularly eye-witness accounts of photographs from the inside of the long-closed Floriss Lanes in north St. Louis county.
Goodbye, Bowling Hall of Fame. We will roll on without you.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Rocking the Vote

Drawn from the hour-long line at my voting place today. Glad to have remembered my sketchbook (and blue and red colored pencils.) There were many more funny details I couldn't squeeze in. Also: my pal D.B. Dowd is doing election-themed drawings all over St. Louis today, much better than mine.

Monday, November 03, 2008

Meat & Greet

I made my students draw big one page comics on sheets of newsprint in class this morning, based on randomized characters (e.g. Scuba-Diver, Person in Hot-Dog Suit) and the classic modes of narrative conflict. I did one too, and drew "Walmart Greeter" and "Man vs. Nature". 

Monday, October 27, 2008

Haunted Hotrod

Drawn at bowling tonight. I've been watching a lot of America's Pyschic Challenge. Happy Halloween!

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Young Abe Lincoln's Log Fort

Here's a strip I've got in this month's (November) Nick Magazine, in the special presidential election comics section. If you find yourself in the magazine aisle of your local grocery look for it! I love drawing that log-typeface! When I cut down the dead trees in my backyard I think I'm going to spell out my full address on my front lawn with a real life version of that log-typeface.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Spooky Extravaganza

Here's a special post just in time for Halloween featuring some of my favorite things: homemade contraptions, heavy-metal logotypes, my dad's inventions, haunted houses, isometric perspective, punk rock, skeleton judges overstepping their judicial authority, the grisly lambasting of local celebrities, etc.
Pictured above is the first page of a comic of mine appearing in a prestigious new anthology from Yale University Press. The book is called AN ANTHOLOGY OF GRAPHIC FICTION, CARTOONS, AND TRUE STORIES VOLUME 2, was edited by the esteemed cartoonist Ivan Brunetti, and has a wrap-around cover by Dan Clowes.My story, which first saw print in KRAMERS ERGOT #6, tells of a church plant manager and her role in the church's haunted house, specifically one transformative attraction. A review in the The Comics Journal described the world created in my strip as "Butt-Rock Winesburg" and that remains one of my most cherished pieces of feedback. Here's half of the grand isometric cut-away spread:
Here are a couple of old chestnuts from the vault, some stuff I drew for the lovely local thrash band Cross Examination. Here's the cover to their first record, vinyl on Deep Six Records and CD on Organized Crime:
And a 2-color T-shirt. The front:The back: a classic case of art direction and editorial oversight (from lead singer Devil Dan) that really made the illustration come alive. And it allowed me to really hone my blood spatter technique. Thanks Devil Dan!
You should also be sure to check out Cross Exam's new record MENACE II SOBRIETY which, in addition to many more post-apocalyptic circle-pit inspiring jams, also includes amazing art and comics from fellow St. Louisan / USS Catastrophe/ Impossible Comics Group member Jeff Worm.
Oh, and one more thing. I drew a new pumpkin-themed Amazing Facts and Beyond this week. I love halloween! And eating/drinking pumpkin-flavored things. Make some suggestions to me! (I've already got the 'Great Pumpkin' from Ted Drewes covered, and then some).
(top and bottom: color gouache & ink tests for characters from Cross-Fader / citizens of Butt-rock Winesburg)

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Monster Mash

Show tomorrow night at the Bluebird! (Wednesday, October 15th). Crocodiles, MAR, and Black for a Second. Should be a good one. I only draw flyers for shows I'm going to, and I only go to good shows, and I only draw good flyers, etc.)

Saturday, October 11, 2008

The Mighty Mississipp, the Ole Miss, the Old Man

Inspired by my pal John Hendrix's drawings, an upcoming print project, and a beautiful St. Louis afternoon I went down to the riverfront to do some sketchbook drawin'. Here's one of the Eads Bridge. I wish I would've brought my fishing pole with me and joined the fellas underneath. I probably would've needed a 40 as well.
I am thinking of starting a St. Louis sketchbook club. Who is with me?!

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Honeymoon Hot-Rod

Drawing I did at a beautiful Bed & Breakfast in Sunny San Diego last weekend on the inside of a wedding card for my pals Sarah and Chris. (They are both runners and that is why they are operating their hot-rod Flintstones style). It was a fun time! Thanks to DBD for the snapshot. Chances are if you are my friends and you get married and you will get a drawing sort of like this. Okay, almost exactly like this. Congrats Chris and Sarah!

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Big Amazing Facts & Beyond News

In honor of tonight's Vice Presidential Debate (being held in our own backyard) here is a special Amazing Facts & Beyond EVENT! It's a full-page, full-color strip exposing some of the strangest strategies and toughest tactics used by vice presidential candidates during their second-tier debates going back over 200 years. As usual, get a copy of the RFT for a hard copy but in the meantime here it is:
In other exciting Leon news, we put together a little booklet containing all the AF&B strips thus far, debuting this weekend at SPX in Bethesda, Maryland.
It's 30 densely-stuffed strips (by me, Kevin H, and Ted May) wrapped up in a 2-color silkscreen wrap-around cover (white and brown ink on Mystic Orange paper). Oh, and it has an index (aka THE BEYONDEX) that is worth the cover price alone. Wait a minute, we forgot to put a cover price on there. I think it's $4 (American). Keep an eye on the catastrophe shoppe for ordering and payment info.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Star Clipper 20 Year Anniversary Art Show

Continuing my theme of giant invaders conquering the St. Louis skyline, I made a print for an art show opening this week at Star Clipper. The design is above. The prints themselves are pretty large and fluorescently 2-colored so they may not photograph well but I'll try. In the meantime, here's the sketch:
It should be a neat show featuring new works by lots of local artists united by love for our favorite comics shoppe. Here is a sneak peek at the inspiration for my pieces, a masterwork at least 20 years in the making. And here is the famous (and still available for purchase!) tote bag I designed a while back.
See you there Friday night!?

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Tastes of St. Louis

Drawing done for the RFT about this weekend's upcoming Taste of St. Louis event downtown. Pretty self-explanatory I think! Palette inspired by the converging colors of the Old Courthouse and the world's largest Vess bottle.I hate the Lumiere Casino and its stupid roadside jumbotron so I was glad to get to destroy them in my drawing. Everything else I love and am sad to see go.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Double Play

Collaborative drawing made my little buddy Nolin Shumate and myself tonight at the ballpark. We lost to Arizona, but the crazy nachos were awesome. I guess you could say we lost the battle but won the war.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

So Close it Hurt

I was perfect through the front-end of the tenth, with knees wobbling, came in high on the head-pin and left a solid 6-10. Oof. Thanks anyways to my Handsome Bros. for doing their best to act cool and collected and not jinx me, and to our lovely opponents the Bowling Beavers.All said and done, I ended up with a nice series. YOU DO THE MATH. (751)

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Word is Born: BEAT STREET

Here's a painting I did for the Cinefamily (at the Silent Movie Theater in LA) September calendar. (Acrylic wash, colored pencil & india ink on cardboard, 24" x 20"). It's illustrating the Word is born: hip-hop at the movies, 1979-1984 festival playing there this month, specifically the movie Beat Street.


Beat Street has got a special place in my heart as it's the first movie I can remember seeing in the theater. It has got a gritty vibe that other mainstream "hip hop" movies lack. I tried to capture this along with the story of the four main guys' friendship.
If you can't get one in real life you should download the entire Cinefamily program for Sept. - Oct. It's also got stuff by Jordan Crane and Ivan Brunetti in it.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Gone Fishin' + Halftone How-To

Pick up the new issue of COMICS COMICS, the hottest tabloid newspaper of comics art and criticism, for a new gigantic one-pager by yours truly. It is reprinted above at a thumbnail size. (Don't try to actually read it or your eyeballs won't speak to you for a while).
You can get your own copy of the awesome oversized magazine from the publisher. Here is a sample panel of my strip, which tells the secret history of comics-related activities along the Ohio River going back 1200 years:
You may have noticed that I'm using a black dot halftone look for this strip (as well as all my recent Amazing Facts & Beyond strips). From a distance it looks like there are areas of gray shading, but when you look closely it actually looks like this:
The reason you would want to use this process is to have complete control over how your final printed art looks. Although advances in digital printing technology have improved handling of continuous gray tones, with this method you know precisely how "dark" the grays in your art will print. I've gotten enough questions about my personal process for home-made halftoning to want to type up a quick tutorial. Here goes:
I reckon I'm a little bit too young to have used actual store bought halftone paper, like the legendary (and out of business) Zip-a-Tone, which was clear plastic adhesive sheets with black dots printed on them in a variety of spacings. For a while though, I made my own "poor man's Zip-a-Tone" out of laserjet transparencies and paste them right on my inked art with glue-sticks (see above). This was punk but messy and time-consuming to I moved to "thinking man's Zip-a-Tone" which involves a computer ("rich man's Zip-a-Tone?"). Here's my process:

1) Scan my lineart drawing at 600 DPI grayscale. This is a good time to tell youngsters never to scan in "lineart" or "bitmap" mode. You and your graphics software will do a much better job at fine-tuning the gray edges of your lines than leaving it to your the robot inside your scanner.

2) Play with the levels to make the ink look black and the paper look white. Do all the clean-ups, tweaks, etc. to the art, change the image size to the final printed size.

3) Convert the file to 1200 DPI bitmap, with the setting to 50% threshold. You do this because you ultimately want your lineart to be totally crisp and not halftoned.

4) Convert the file back to grayscale leaving it at 1200 DPI.

5) Go through and add the gray tones with a 20% K. You could do it darker if you wanted more dense dots. (no need to do it on a separate layer, just use the paint bucket or a brush set to 'darken' or whatever. All you should have a white pixels, black pixels, and the gray tone pixels)
6) Convert it to back to 1200 DPI bitmap, with the 'haftone screen' settings set like this.
(you can mess around with those settings too, if you want your dots to be bigger or stupid shapes or whatever).
Then you are done!
The main thing is that your art is thresholded before you start adding grays. Otherwise when you go to turn the whole thing to halftone your art will get a tiny bit fuzzy around the edges.
To leave you with another piece of halftoned art I did recently, here's a tough t-shirt design I hooked my mom and her students up with. I will do a tutorial on Illustrator Barb Wire Pattern Brushes another time.Go Louisville Male High School Bulldogs!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Where does the Past Live?

We went and heard Lynda Barry give a great talk last night at the Central Library here in St. Louis. She is one of my all-time favorite cartoonists (I put her in left field of my all-star lineup) and her new book is sort of a writing workshop/workbook that is really beautiful and inspiring. An image/memory exercise she gave was to think of an automobile and what is the first one that comes to mind? Mine is this yellow station wagon we had when I was a kid, the CruiseMobile II (sequel to an earlier blue Station Wagon which I don't remember as vividly). I drew it today in my sketchbook during a boring meeting (watercolor added when I got home).

Wednesday, August 20, 2008