Luis' Illustrated Blog

Simpsons Storyboard artist. Artist and storyteller. Exploring how to make a living, by being creative.
  • About me
  • Art, Stories & Comics by me
    • Illustrated trip to Italy
    • Superhero Versus Superhero
    • The Black Terror Kid #1
    • The Black Terror Kid #2
    • The Seven Impossible Tasks
  • Supporters
  • Making my Illustrated Film.
    • 04 Juggling overlapping art decisions
    • 05 Designing environments
    • 06 Composition and Design principles
    • 07 Why design from reality
    • 08 Adding tone to a thumbnail sketch
    • 09 From thumbnail to final line
    • 10 Tone, how to add it
    • 11 Finalizing and coloring a concept drawing
    • 12 Struggling: Finding the right poses.
    • 13 Coloring poses
    • 14 The teaser trailer
    • 15 Story Theory and throughlines
    • 01 Story concept and rough outline
    • 02 Finding a style
    • 03 Designing Antagonists
  • Shop
  • Checkout
  • My Account
  • Cart

Monthly Archives: November 2011

Sick and working. The Tower’s Alchemist Chapter 4 (again). Designing more demons. My laptop stopped working.

November 24, 2011 in ART, BOOKS, FAMILY, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Went to work sick this week.  It was miserable.

I managed to finish my Act on this very odd episode I’m on.  I wrote about it last week but the post has been lost.

The co-worker I share an office with is doing boards on next year’s Halloween show.  It’s epic. So epic in fact that there was no way he was  going to get the boards done by deadline.  It didn’t help that they want him to be done with it early because of the holiday this week. So production asked me to help him out.   Thing is, I was also suppose to finish a very special Couch Gag for the other episode I was taken off of.  It was kinda involved but I was given only given Wednesday to do it all.  That was a pain. Lucky for me, they extended the deadline for that Couch Gag til Monday. That helps a lot.

So enough complaining.  I will say this about working on at the studio:

Production has been nothing but supportive with my current situation at home. They sent flowers and have put up with my crazy schedules (coming in late, working half days, being out for bereavement).  They’ve helped take the edge off all these events that I’ve had to deal with in the last few days, and for that, I’m very grateful.

FAMILY

My five year old daughter Elizabeth, had a fever for five days two weeks ago.  Just as she recovered and we thought we could get on with our week, my three year old, Dante, got the fever.

The problem was, we had my mother-in-law’s wake and funeral to go to.  In the end, I ended up coming home early on the day of the wake to take care of Dante so  my wife could go.

We had other plans.  My wife’s best friend Miriam, was going to come over to watch the kids while we both went to the wake but she has a little girl named River. We didn’t want River to get sick, so I ended up having to do it.  This said, Miriam actually came by and dropped off dinner for us that night, for which I was VERY grateful since it was a bit overwhelming to take care of the sick kids and get them their food. It also helped that, not only did she bring chicken soup for the kids but she brought Pupusas, that her neighbor made. SO GOOD.

Thank you again Miriam.

In other news…

My wife and I went to my mother-in-law’s funeral.  It was a very nice funeral and some VERY inspiring things were said that day.  Once it got to the end though, it got real brutal for everyone.  Saying good bye, “officially” was SO hard.

MY WEEK

My ten year old laptop stopped working this weekend.  It was an IBM Thinkpad laptop and it was my workhorse computer.  It was still running well, and I took it everywhere. I had it backed up so I didn’t really lose anything.

There’s  still a possibility that I can get it working again.  The computer actually didn’t die. What died was the AC adapter.  It stopped charging the computer.  The computer ran out of power and so now it’s not working.  I’m going to see if I can’t buy another adepter (this will be the third one I would have bought).  It might wake the computer back up, IF the battery hasn’t died on me.

Why don’t I get another laptop? I can’t afford one.  Finances are REAL bad right now.

Sux.

Now I have to do all my home computing on my 12 year old Del.

In other news…

You can’t really tell but, as I posted this weekend, I updated WordPress on my blog.  I’ve been wanting to do it for a while now but I was afraid of losing everything I’d ever written.  I was using a four year old version of WordPress that didn’t have the “update” button.  In the end, everything turned out okay.  I lost last week’s post but I honestly think it might exist in a database on my server somewhere.  I have to do some investigating but It’s possible I might be able to recover it. It’s not necessary for me to do this but I just want to, for the sake of having it.

In the mean time, I’m also considering changing the look of this blog to be more up to date.  I have yet to find a theme I like but don’t be surprised if things change a bit sometime soon.

ART

Okay, I’m re-posting the Serpent Demon design I posted in last weeks’ lost post. Too bad I completely forgot what I wrote about this and what I wanted to say about it so I’ll just write whatever I think to write now:

The demons are the source of the Sorcerer’s power. They allow themselves to be “possessed” by them in exchange for power.  This is hardly an original idea.  It’s a common motif in the Swords and Sorcerer genre.  Especially in the Conan stories.  The more powerful the Sorcerer in those stories, the less human they are.  Magick in that genre is a very dangerous and corrupting force. I took that idea and did my own thing with it.

The Serpent demon below, is the demon the Lead Sorcerer made a pact with.  It gives him the power to manipulate and control other peoples minds.

The rough drawing on the bottom of the page above, is an experiment on my part. I was seeing how it might look like when the demon visibly manifest, near the end of the story.  Design wise, I was trying to play with the shape contrasts. If the eyes are big and far apart, perhaps the nose should be small and high up. If the head is small and squished, perhaps the neck and body should be long and thick. I also gave it no arms, just where you think it should have some, so that it was a bit more creepy to look at.  It also matches the serpent motif I was going for.

 

Even though I was sick this week and didn’t feel like drawing at all, I forced myself to work on designing demon number two, The Entropy demon. The idea is that this demon gives it’s possessor the power to destroy things by speeding up how fast a thing decays through the ravages of time. Organic things rot and die, none organic things rust, turn to dust, or whatever. I figured, it’s a bit of a death demon.  I wanted it to look like, it too, was falling apart.

The first thing I did was make a web search for animal skulls. The first two roughs at top where the first sketches I did, but they didn’t have the creepy look I was looking for:

I then made a search for insect faces, since they tend to creep me out.  I found a photo of a very nasty looking fly face that had  a hole in it’s front, like a nose cavity.  I drew the sketch on the middle left off it, but I didn’t really like it.  It reminded me of the Thumper design in Pixar’s BUG’S LIFE.

I then searched for close ups of vampire bat faces.  This inspired me to draw the cloaked figure on the page.  This was much closer to what I wanted.  I’m not sure if it’s exactly what I want yet.  It doesn’t look enough like it’s falling apart or rotting. It’s also a tad too cartoony to be creepy.

When looking at the vampire photos I saw a photo of a vampire skull. Those things are really weird and creepy looking. I tried sketching out some drawings on the bottom of the page.  I was attempting to capture what I thought was creepy about them.  Not sure I succeeded.  I’ll try again next week.

Perhaps I should just leave out the eyes…

BOOKS

I posted this last week but it got lost so I’ll post again this week. for anyone who didn’t get a chance to read it.  Chapter four of THE TOWER’S ALCHEMIST:

CLICK HERE to read Chapter 1.

CLICK HERE to read Chapter 2.

CLICK HERE to read Chapter 3

The $2.99 Kindle copy of the book:

or…

The hard copy of the book:

CHAPTER FOUR

 

At the first rays of dawn I awoke and went to soak in a hot bath, trying to expel my bitter feelings from last night’s encounter. This was neither the first nor the last time I would run into officers like Adelbert and Gerhardt. Sometimes I wanted to shed my façade and just start hitting them with spells that would make them run back home with their tails in between their legs like the cowardly dogs they were. However, being a vigilante wizard wasn’t part of my mission, though sometimes I wished it were.

My limbs still ached from last night’s assault and my shoulders burned with soreness, but otherwise I felt fine. As I relaxed in the warm water I noticed on an adjacent shelf a display of waxy soaps, some wrapped, from different regions of France and even other countries.

These were probably small gifts left by guests who’ve come and gone, some perhaps forever. Looking at the display reminded me of my father, who’d bring my brother and me treats from the different places he had traveled to. And for my mother, he’d bring exotic flowers and a heartfelt kiss.

I laughed to myself when I remembered how he would always warn us not to stay up late eating candy, and Johnnie and I would hide our treats all over the house in the most unlikeliest of places so that we could grab them whenever we’d want—and my father found each and every one of them without fail. As a child, I never understood how he knew and anticipated every plan and move we’d make. My favorite part though was when he’d tuck us in and read me Emily Dickinson poetry until I fell asleep. Though I was only eight and didn’t completely understand it all, I had always found her poetry fascinating, and I enjoyed the fact that a girl wrote it.

After nearly an hour in my thoughts and memories, I tore myself away from the tub with lethargic movements and got dressed. I hid my supplies beneath a secret panel in the floor before heading to the kitchen. My stomach rumbled when I caught a whiff of the fresh pastries just coming out of the oven.

I greeted Renée, the woman who had admitted me last night, and sat at the table and helped myself to a cup of coffee. She looked rather pleased at my enthusiasm as she placed a couple of pastries on my plate. Though I didn’t know her, I knew of her, and that she had been with the Resistance since the beginning. I was glad that she had accepted the task of hosting me.

“My husband fought in the Free French Army until a Maquisard betrayed him and murdered him in his sleep.” She gestured toward her husband’s portrait hanging on the wall. “My son and daughter-in-law were sent off to Dachau and I’ve never heard from them since.”

I shook my head. “Our enemies knew you were hurting them…you were important.” Those Gestapo bastards often kidnapped or killed members of people’s families as retribution.

“Have you lost anyone, Emelie?”

“Yes…I mean, I hope not.” Stella, where are you?

“I once had a guest tell me that he at first thought I was a hard woman because I still fought despite everything. The truth is I’m the type of woman who would go into my son’s old room and dust off his belongings, fluff his pillow, and sometimes just sit or cry.”

“I’m very sorry for your loss.” It reminded me of Stella and how I acted as custodian over her items, though I feared the most likely outcome of her fate.

“Thank you.”

“May I ask you about Veit Heilwig? Do you know anything about him?” I breathed in the heady and aromatic scent of the coffee before taking another long sip.

“Dr. Heilwig fashions himself a man of great intellect,” Renée said as she escaped her somber mood and poured herself some coffee. The fine lines in her face softened. “He is at the university lecturing and poisoning minds.”

I broke off a piece of my pastry and ate it before speaking. “Do you know anything else about the chemical weapons being used?”

“I heard that they’ve transferred more from the south where Mussolini’s men are stationed, but no one really knows where they are coming from. They’re probably in a factory in this region, though the Maquis haven’t been able to find out which one.”

“Perhaps Mathieu could help us with that,” I said.

Mathieu Perrine had become the unofficial voice of the Maquis during occupation. His nightly radio broadcasts were a constant thorn in the Gestapo’s side. If you ever needed a message to be sent out or coded instructions to the nearest safe house, or a simple word of encouragement, Mathieu could deliver.

“I’ll try to contact him and see, but it won’t be easy.” She sipped her coffee. “We lost a safe house last week and I fear the Gestapo is becoming more ruthless.”

“I understand. I’ll most likely have to get into the university to keep an eye on Heilwig.”

“Without credentials?”

“Is Penn in Paris? He can give me the papers I need.” I looked askance when she kept staring at me.

“So young,” she shook her head. “I don’t know if you just seem familiar to me or you remind me of myself. Believe it or not, I was like you once, and now I am just old and tired.”

“You were one of the first.” Though I gazed at her with pride, it was tempered by the sadness in her eyes.

“And perhaps I will be one of the last. Only God knows. Just remember to stay true to yourself, no matter what…that’s what I’ve learned.”

“Very sound advice.” I drummed my fingers on the table and stared at my Agate stone ring.

“Well, I might as well show you around, Emelie. Would you care to see the garden?”

“Please.”

I followed her to the back door that led to the plot of land behind the house. A picket fence enclosed the garden and I could see three small crosses peeking out from beneath the hyacinths. Inscribed on each cross were the words “Se Souvenir,” which meant “Remember.” For most of us, remembering something painful often proved to be difficult, but Renée seemed to embrace it because it was all she had left.

“Do you see the tool shed over there?” She pointed at the wooden structure with its peeling white paint. I cringed a little at the thought of me slamming the trapdoor so hard last night.

“I had one of those…at my parents’ old house.”

“Make sure that you always take the underground passageway beneath the floor that leads to the chapel down the hill. No one must know that you’re staying here.”

I gazed at her in amazement. “You made that passageway yourself?”

“I can’t take credit for it. My husband did it years ago during the Great War when we thought Paris might be taken.”

“Your husband must have been a great man.”

“And to think, when he first proposed to me I turned him down.” She chuckled. “He was very intelligent, but not always the best at showing his emotions. Even when he proposed to me it was more of a logical argument as to why we would be compatible mates. One day, he showed up with flowers and a poem he had written for me. I knew then that I wanted to marry him.”

“And the crosses are for him, and your son and his wife?”

She smoothed her hair right where a streak of gray stood out. “Three reasons to get out of bed every morning and keep doing my work. I used to hide maps, weapons, and even passports back here. So many people have come through this house, each leaving his own mark.”

“What do you hide there now?” The air was quiet—a good quiet, but a sad quiet.

“Nothing. I haven’t had a guest in eight months. Soon, SOE will forget about me.”

I raised an eyebrow. “This can’t be the same woman who I hear inspired so many SOE agents and even saved lives.”

She folded her arms. “Is that what they say about me?”

“Well, I don’t think the Gestapo has forgotten about you.” Even from here I could hear trekkers speeding up the hill, and I exchanged glances with her.

“Wait here,” she said. “If they come to the door, I’ll talk to them.” She patted me on my shoulder and headed toward the front, either apathetic to her possible fate or resigned to it.

My heart jumped at the shouting and loud knocks at the door. I listened carefully just in case Renée needed me. I heard two agents speaking with her, and then a pair of heavy shoes pounding against the floor throughout the house. Doors opened and shut, closets were ransacked, and I thought I even heard the toilet being checked. As the pounding footsteps grew louder, I placed my back against the wall and tiptoed side ways. Just as I turned the corner, the back door opened.

Not waiting to see if the Gestapo agent would explore the backyard further, I made my way toward the front but froze in place when I heard the second agent with Renée from an open window right above me.

“Adelbert caught a suspicious woman riding around last night. You wouldn’t happen to know anything about that?”

“Mister Karsten—”

“Agent Karsten.”

“I’ve only been up a couple of hours.”

I flinched and bit my tongue when I heard a thunderous slap. “I asked you about last night, not about this morning.”

I was just about to turn the corner and make it to the front of the house when I saw the second agent coming from the other side. I ran back toward the garden, hoping he hadn’t seen me from the corner of his eye. I didn’t want to chance running into him so I stayed in the back, listening for footsteps. When I heard none, I slipped in through the back door, my bare feet tiptoeing once more. I quickly went into Renée’s son’s old room and stood against the wall, straining to keep track of the conversation and praying I could make it over in time if he decided to pull out a weapon.

“Who had breakfast with you?”

“The old man, Otto, who lives down near the chapel. He’s a friend of mine.”

“Lorenz, go see Otto.”

“Yes, sir.” Lorenz left and shut the door.

“How are your Maquis friends, Renée?”

“They cost me my family. I wouldn’t quite call them friends.”

“I might as well have some refreshments while I’m here. Got anymore coffee?”

“Of course,” she responded in a stiff voice, but I heard her go into the kitchen and return.

“Ah, looks delicious. The old man must’ve left in a hurry.” I could hear him scraping a spoon against the bottom of a coffee cup.

“Is there anything else I can get you, Agent Karsten?”

“Sounds like Lorenz is coming back up the road. Are you sure there isn’t anything you want to confess?”

“Only the guilty have something to confess, sir.”

“Well let’s see if you’re the lying whore that I think you are.”

The door opened and Lorenz’s boots scuffed the floor. “Sir, the old man said he had breakfast this morning with her…and asked if she had any more pastries left.”

A torturous silence filled the house and I stepped closer to the doorway, my heart pounding in my chest and my palms sweaty. If anything happened to Renée, I would feel responsible, and I didn’t know if I would forgive myself for that.

Karsten grunted. “Then let’s not waste any more time. Perhaps we’ll stop by later.”

As soon as I heard them depart and the loud rumble of their trekker fade in the distance, I ran into the living room toward Renée. I gently touched her left cheek and felt a burning sensation where Karsten had struck her. I delivered a cool flow of healing energy through my fingertips and shrank the swollen bruise on her face.

“Are you all right?”

“I’ll be fine,” she sighed. “They know about my husband and son, so every now and then they come and try to scare me.”

“Cowards. Thank goodness Otto went along with your story.”

“Yes, and it helps that I make only pastries for breakfast anyway.”

My hand fell to my side. “I thought I was going to have a heart attack.”

“So did I, Emelie.” Suddenly she jolted. “Emelie…I knew there was something familiar about you. This may sound strange but Otto came by a month ago and said he had a letter for you. I didn’t know what he was talking about since I hadn’t hosted anyone in months, but he was adamant that the letter be given to an Emelie.”

“Me? Are you sure?” I didn’t receive letters while undercover. This was either extremely important or terribly dangerous.

“I don’t know.” She frowned. “But he’s very loyal and discreet. You can go see him this afternoon and find out about it.”

The letter certainly piqued my curiosity, but it also made me uneasy. I ran through nearly all the people I knew as I tried to guess who would attempt to send me a note under these circumstances. I managed to put aside my worries and offered to clear the table and wash dishes for Renée. I didn’t forget to thank her for the meal, and especially for her protection. After I got rid of my milkmaid’s dress and the jumpsuit, I borrowed one of Renée’s old shift dresses and a sun hat to cover my head. She had already packed the remaining pastries and set them in a picnic basket, asking me to thank Otto once more for his aid. I headed out the back door carrying the basket and made my way to the tool shed. Using a candle Renée had given me, I made my way through the dark tunnel.

Wooden beams reinforced the ceiling and walls, and I went a little faster when I thought I felt something scurry across my toes. I exited through the trapdoor in the chapel. Otto wasn’t there, and so I walked through the front and headed toward his house, stiffening with each car that passed and refraining from making eye contact with others.

I wanted to cringe when I spied three SS officers with weapons drawn, and four young men and two women on their knees in a line, hands behind their heads. The situation startled me, and though I’ve seen death and have sent enemies to their deaths, the idea of shooting innocent and defenseless people in the streets like that filled me with a sickening dread. I started running toward them but when the first gunshot rang, I knew I was too late.

“This will be the punishment for all terrorists!” one of the officers shouted to horrified passersby and witnesses. Once again, the cowards had used murder to intimidate their foes.

I slowed my pace as each subsequent shot ripped away the façade of tranquility that the mild summer weather presented. I held back tears of anger as I slowly went up Otto’s front steps. I had made sure to look at each officer, remembering their nametags and faces, promising that they would one day get what they deserved.

Otto opened the door and ushered me through, and gladly accepted the basket of pastries I brought him. He led me to his sofa and had me take a seat, all the while asking me who had been shot in the street. I shook my head and let the matter go; I was still upset at the sight, and I didn’t know who the people were, but they certainly weren’t terrorists. The real terrorists were wearing swastikas.

“It’s a shame,” he said as he took a seat next to me. “I fought in the Battle of the Marne over fifteen years ago and thought the Germans wouldn’t dare come back after that. Now I must sit here and suffer them shooting people in the streets.”

“Do you still work with the Resistance?”

He snorted. “They say I’m too old. They’ll let boys who are barely old enough to shave carry messages back and forth, but me? No…Old Otto might break his foot coming down the steps.” He muttered a curse word in French and I reluctantly smirked.

A steaming kettle whistled from the kitchen and he excused himself. I glanced at his coffee table that was covered with newspapers and magazines, and I could hear the low humming of the radio. It seemed Otto spent much of his time trying to keep up with current events, though the Nazis filtered or censored most of the information. Mathieu Perrine’s radio broadcasts were the only trustworthy source of what really went on with the Allies and the Resistance. I grinned when I saw Otto return with a hot cup of tea for me, and I politely listened as he began telling me about his son Lucien.

“My boy fought alongside the Maquisards and eventually joined the Free French Army.” He smacked his lips when I handed him a pastry from the basket. “He’s on special assignment in Spain with some Americans. They’re trying to bolster public support for the Allied forces—secretly, of course, since General Franco would not openly have any of it. Perhaps you can meet Lucien one day as he is a fine young man, and unmarried!”

I smiled again and took a sip of tea as he showed me a picture of Lucien. I didn’t want to be rude, but elders were notorious for holding you hostage in a conversation if you let them. I needed to grab my letter and find out who tried to contact me.

“Renée told me you had a letter? May I see it?”

“Yes, yes…I will get it.” He nodded his hoary head and shuffled over to a cupboard where he had a secret compartment. At least two pictures of his son Lucien hung on every wall. There were also pictures of a beautiful young woman, probably his deceased wife when she was younger.

“Here it is, and it’s still sealed.” He handed me the letter and then sat across from me, filling his pipe.

“Who gave it to you?” My heart nearly skipped a beat when I recognized the handwriting.

“A courier. I took it and thought maybe he had intended it to go to Renée since she has people stay at her house sometimes. I brought it to her the day I received it but she insisted that I keep it. I think she was waiting to see if I was fool enough to get caught.”

I opened the letter and unfolded the sheet of paper. It had no signature or date:

 

Safe in their alabaster chambers,

untouched by morning and untouched by noon,

sleep the meek members of the resurrection,

rafter of satin, and roof of stone.

I should have shielded you from our friends.

We will meet again.

 

I re-read the note until I had committed it to memory. I promptly took it over to the stove and lit it on fire, watching the paper blacken and curl. The note confused me, and scared me. My head wagged back and forth in denial, and for a moment I thought someone was playing a cruel joke on me.

“My dear…why did you burn that letter? Was it not important?” Otto had come into the kitchen with an anxious expression.

“If you were still active, you’d know to never keep any papers or letters on you. If they were lost or if you were captured…then what?” I didn’t want to snap at him, but I had little patience to spare these days.

“I apologize.”

“You don’t need to…thanks for the letter, and I hope your son safely returns.”

I gave him a peck on the cheek and trudged toward the door, once again being faced with walking back to the chapel. The bodies of the victims had been removed, but their blood still stained the street. I felt like I would go berserk if I saw another SS officer out on the road but luckily I didn’t.

When I returned to the house, Renée saw me trembling and she pulled me to sit down at the table. I barely heard her questions and didn’t even reach for the glass of water she pushed in front of me. I kept arguing with myself in my mind about the note and how my father couldn’t have sent it. First, I knew for a fact he wasn’t in France, nor would he have been within the last month. Second, he was a very straightforward man, much like Renée’s husband. Why would he send me such a cryptic message? Renée kept rubbing my shoulder in a consoling manner and staring into my eyes, finally falling into silence because she seemed afraid of what I would say.

“I got the letter…from Otto.” A letter that was either a lie or pointing toward one.

“Wh-what did it say?”

I took a moment to clear my dry throat. “I think it’s from my father.”

“Is he in France?”

“He died sixteen years ago in Rome.” Both the U.S. Army and the Gray Tower confirmed it.

“My God…” She placed her hand on her chest as she exhaled; her shocked expression mirrored my own. “Are…are you sure he’s dead?”

“I don’t know anymore.” I felt my stomach tighten. If this note had truly been penned by him, then that meant I had been lied to about my father, and so everything I’ve believed about him…I didn’t know what I believed anymore. It was his handwriting, a reference that he knew I would recognize, and it had been addressed to my codename—eerily enough the same name as my favorite poet.

“What did the letter say?”

I repeated the lines to her and realized that the first four lines were an excerpt from an Emily Dickinson poem about time and eternity. Why this poem?

“I have that poetry collection!” Renée shot up and went into her son’s old room, leaving me to recall what I did know about my father.

He rose through the ranks of the U.S. Army and had also been trained by the Gray Tower. Both institutions readily assented to my father being a liaison between the military and the Order of Wizards, and by all accounts he served honorably. One November evening when another Elite Wizard, Serafino Pedraic, came from the Gray Tower to meet with my father in Rome, his bloodstained apartment had been ransacked and he hadn’t been seen since.

After a lengthy investigation Serafino had arrived at our house along with General Robert Cambria and delivered their final verdict—Major Carson William George was dead. Though I was ten years old, certainly old enough to understand, part of me wanted to deny it and keep believing that my father would come through the front door any day with candy for me and Jonathan, and flowers for my mother. But he never came home.

All other kinds of emotions rose inside me, and I didn’t know what to make of them. I believed my father had written the note, but where was he if he was alive, and why had he been missing all those years? I kept ruminating over his words. What exactly did he mean by shielding me from our friends? He mentioned alabaster chambers and resurrection; could it be about death? Dickinson was a bit preoccupied with it. Maybe it was a warning that someone would die.

“Here it is.” Renée nearly bumped into the table. She held a book open and started reading the poem to me, pausing after each stanza to see if I recognized any significance in them.

I shook my head, having only listened to half of her words. “I need to think about all this.”

“Sooner or later, it will come to you. You say you haven’t seen your father in years…perhaps there were things he said to you or that you’ve heard while he was still around.”

“Maybe.”

She closed the book. “Penn is with The Red Lady. Will you be going down to the nightclub later?”

I gestured toward the back where my guestroom stood. “Do you have any extra dresses in that armoire?”

“Do you like purple satin?”

“I’ll take it.”

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.

//

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Comments Off on Sick and working. The Tower’s Alchemist Chapter 4 (again). Designing more demons. My laptop stopped working.

Updating made me lose my latest post.

November 19, 2011 in THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Sorry. I updated my version of WordPress today, (it was 4 years old). Unfortunately I backed up my site earlier in the week and it didn’t have a copy of my latest post.  So it was only up for two days and now it’s gone.  I’ll see if it still exists in a database on my server but I’m pretty sure it’s lost.  Things will continue as usual next week. I’ll rewrite some of what I put up this week next week.

Personally, I think it could have been much worse.

 

Copyright Luis Escobar 2007 www.luisescobarblog.com

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Comments Off on Updating made me lose my latest post.

Sharon Mcdade, loving mother.

November 10, 2011 in FAMILY, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Bad news happened last Thursday.  I’ve missed three days of work so far because of it.

More below.

FAMILY

My mother-in-law, Sharon Mcdade, was murdered Thursday morning.  The circumstances are such that I don’t think I want to go into details. Needless to say that we’ve been hit pretty hard emotionally.  I thought about maybe drawing a picture specifically, in her memory.  But just thinking about it made me want to break down.  I don’t think I’m capable of doing it nor do I have the time even if I was strong enough to do it.

Instead, I’m putting up this painting of a rose I did years ago. I thought it would be appropriate:

rose.jpg

I don’t think I should really put anything else up on this blog this week.  It doesn’t seem right.

I do ask you for your prayers for my wife and her family, who are devastated.   My mother-in-law, was only fifty.  She was so young and happy.  I loved her and miss her.

Okay, that’s it from me.

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

8 Comments »

The Tower’s Alchemist Chapter 3. Finished my script now designing demons.

November 3, 2011 in ART, BOOKS, FAMILY, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, WRITING

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

I managed to finish my job early last week.  I ended up getting put on a Simpsons video game project for the day.  Looks fun.  That’s all I’ll say about that.

This week I started  revisions on another episode.  Fun show.  My Act has some heavy rewrites but the theme is so fun, I don’t mind.

I was also given the Couch Gag to board.  It’s short and sweet.  A thankful change from the epic Couch Gags I had been assigned before.

ART/WRITING

After a year of developing the story, I FINALLY finished writing my script.   It feels sooo good.  By “script”, I mean, I wrote down all the dialogue…and nothing else.  No description, just dialogue.  It looks like this:

LS: You’re coming with us now barbarian.

R: Coming with you? Coming WITH you, really? You’re…you’re, not going to try to kill me or anything? …Where do you think you’re taking me?

LS: Stop playing games and come with us.

R: (HOLDING BACK ANGER) Look, I can probably guess why you guys are here but I haven’t got the slightest idea why you want to take me anywhere.  Plus, you guys acting all hostile sure as hell doesn’t make me want to go anywhere with you, so…please, can you just leave me alone?

LS: How dare you!

R: What?! You’re bothering ME. I haven’t done anything to you!

LS: Haven’t done anything to us? You’ve hurt my friends! Do you deny that you’ve incapacitated 30 different Sorcerers that have come in contact with you in the past? People I know personally. The ruthlessness of the those attacks where completely uncalled for. Your dangerous! You should be locked up.  Your a menace to society.  If anyone knew how evil you were, no one let you walk around free.

R: WHAT?! Are you kidding me?! Those FRIENDS of yours ATTACKED me.  I was defending myself.  I asked them to stop and they kept on coming.   I didn’t seek them out, they sought me out. I didn’t want ANYTHING to do with them in the first place!

LS: Oh really?

R: Yes, really!

LS: Then if what you say is true, you won’t mind coming with us so that we can sort this all out. We take you to the Sorcerer’s High Tower and you plead your case.  If what you say can be proven, then you can go on your way and no one will bother you again.

R: (Laughs)

LS: Are you mocking us!

R: No, no…It’s just, this is just seems a bit crazy to me. Okay so, you’ve wanted me to go with you to the Sorcerer’s High Tower from the start right?

LS: Yes.

R: Okay, I see.  And you guys are going to put me on trail for defending myself?

LS: IF you where defending yourself, you will be found innocent.

R: And who’s going to judge me? Sorcerers?

LS: Yes.

R: And somehow that’s going to be fair?

LS: Of course.

R: Are you kidding me? You guys think I’m so sort of Dark Lord that’s going to take over the world. You ALL hate me.  There’s NO WAY I’m getting a fair hearing.

LS: It will be fair.

R: I’m sorry but there’s nothing from experiences with you Sorcerers that I can point to that makes me believe you. What if I don’t want to go? What if I decide to stay here?

LS: Then your actions will speak louder than your words. It would prove your guilt because you’re obviously hiding something. We will KNOW that you are what the prophecy foretells you to be.  Which means that we will be forced to kill you in order to save the word from your slavery.

R: (SIGH) You got to be kidding me. You realize this is catch 22?  I’m damned if I do, I’m damned if I don’t.  This is EXACTLY how all the other fights with the other guys started. For goodness sake, I’m NOT some evil overlord that going to take over the world. I’m just a guy who want to be left alone so I can eat my lunch in peace.  So…I’m sorry, but I’m going to stay here. Okay? Please leave.

LS: I’m sorry to hear you say that. I truly am.  I tried to reason with you but…you leave me no choice.  (TURNING TO HIS COMPANIONS) Alright guys, lets do this…

R: WAIT! Wait. Just a sec.  Just give me a second.  Okay, listen, what can I do that will get you guys to give me five minutes to eat my lunch?  Anything?  I just want five minutes here. Then you could try to kill me all you want.

That’s pretty much what it looks like.  The dialogue isn’t set in stone and if it doesn’t come across well, I’ll change it till it does.

Why no descriptions?  Because I want to be able to improvise the visuals as I go.  Besides, all the description was written down at the treatment phase and I didn’t want to repeat myself.  It’s not like anyone is suppose to read the script but me.  This is the usual way I write scripts for myself.

I also started designing the last characters for my film.  The demons. Starting with the snake demon:

snake-demons.jpg

I’m not very good at designing monsters and none of these sketches were what I wanted.  None, but the last one I drew on the bottom right corner.   That on is definitely beginning to go in the right direction. I wanted something that looked scary, not heroic.  I ended up looking at a picture of Christopher Walken and started to draw a caricature of it.  Half way through, I began adding reptilian, features to it and it started to look a bit freaky.  I’m gonna have to play around with the idea some more.  Hopefully I’ll get something I like.

BOOKS/FAMILY

Like I did last week, I’m posting another chapter from my wife’s book THE TOWER’S ALCHEMIST. This week, it’s Chapter 3.

CLICK HERE to read Chapter 1.

CLICK HERE to read Chapter 2.

But first…I was wondering if you could do us a favor.  Whether or not you’re planning to buy the book or not, I would REALLY help us out, if you can go to the Amazon page of the book and check the little boxes next to the tags near the bottom.  They look like this:

amazon-tags.png

You’ll have to be logged in to see the boxes.

The reason we’re asking, is that by doing so, whenever someone looks up something related to those tags, there’s a higher chance that Alesha’s book will pop up near the top of the list.  This would help our visibility a lot.

To go to the Amazon page click on one of the links below:

The $2.99 Kindle copy of the book:

or…

The hard copy of the book:

Thank you in advance.

Okay, so without further ado:

CHAPTER THREE

 

The cab driver flinched when he saw the bomb drop. It fell through the sky with a deadly grace, but I didn’t bat an eyelash. I pressed my hand against the window and reached out with my senses, making sure that a curse hadn’t been laid along with the bomb’s contents.

“Are you sure it’s safe to go to the air hangar?” he asked, slowing the car.

“It was a leaflet bomber,” I told him, as we watched a multitude of folded papers eject from the bomb and swirl through the air. The empty container would land without incident, but the propaganda leaflets would make their way into people’s hands—but hopefully not their hearts.

He wiped his brow. “Thank God. I thought it would explode.”

I shook my head at some of the Royal Air Force officers running over and collecting the leaflets. Though the Nazis dropped their leaflet bombs in city centers where they could reach the civilian population, every now and then a batch would be directed toward a military or industrial site. I didn’t know how many Air Force officers gave credence to the propaganda printed on those papers, but it probably wouldn’t galvanize them to read about how the impeccable prophet Nostradamus predicted their demise four hundred years ago and to see pictures of dead Ally soldiers littering the ground. That is, if you believed in their Black Propaganda.

“You can let me out here, thank you.” I gave him a squeeze on the shoulder and then opened my door.

“SOE isn’t paying me enough for this. One day it’ll fall out of the sky and hit me right on the head.” He let out a nervous laugh.

I smiled back at him and said goodbye. As I exited the car, I saw the sky turn a deep orange and I knew that at sunset I’d have to board the transport plane to Paris. I could hear the engine of a spitfire fighter plane pass over and wondered if it went to hunt down the bomber that had dropped the leaflets. As a couple of officers admitted me into the hangar, I spotted one of the pilots running in from the field with a few leaflets in hand. 

“Good evening, Emelie.”

“Hi, Max.” I took one of the leaflets he offered and grunted when I read it. “What are you guys going to do with these?”

“Burn them…like the others.”

That sounded like a good idea, especially since the one I held in my hand made me want to toss it into a fire without looking back. It had a drawing of a dark crooked tower with a caricature of a wizard perched on top and raining his spells down on frightened people. In bolded letters it said, “The Gray Tower helps now, so it can harm later.”

I gave the leaflet back to Max. “Make sure you get rid of all of these.”

We halted when Richard approached us with my supply pack and jumpsuit in hand. He gave them to me and pointed toward a changing room. “We’re leaving in an hour.”

“Lieutenant,” Max said, “We got these—”

Richard jerked his thumb in the direction of one of the large storage bins. “We don’t need any of that bollocks here. Trash them.”

Max immediately headed for the bin to dispose of the leaflets. I was glad Richard refused to even take a look at them because sometimes I’d get odd stares or snide comments from colleagues at SOE who knew I had trained with the Gray Tower. 

At first I had dismissed it as plain ignorance, or even a bit of envy on days that I needed my own confidence boosted. However as the war progressed, I realized that many of them were afraid. In the back of their minds they probably wondered if I’d turn rogue and blast them all away.

Though the Masters imposed strict rules on members of the Order while at the Gray Tower, they didn’t have much to say when it came to us being in the outside world. I could understand why people, or governments for that matter, would be wary. Still, it didn’t hurt to show a little friendliness, especially toward those of us who willingly joined the Ally cause and risked our lives each day. 

As Richard turned and started barking orders at the maintenance crew that worked on a bomber, I made my way through the bustle on the hangar floor to the changing room. I felt a little guilty about making this my last assignment, but I promised myself that I’d at least make it my most successful one. The average life expectancy of an SOE agent was just a few months, and I’ve lasted over a year. So, if one really wanted to get into the mathematics of it, I’ve basically served a couple of lifetimes. 

That had to count for something, right?

 

When night fell, I rode in a transport plane that could be shot out of the sky any second, and poised myself to leap toward the dark terrain of the northern region of France. From there I’d have to find my way to Paris. Most SOE agents came here by plane or submarine, sneaking their way toward the Maquis resistance fighters or a Nazi target. 

We started off doing “small jobs” like operating anti-Nazi radio programs, bringing in food and arms to friends and stranded Ally soldiers, and relaying messages and news back to SOE headquarters. Most of us were women, from all walks of life, from both Europe and America, who wanted to do more for our countries than to stay at home and worry. 

The male-dominated intelligence community treated us with disdain, but soon even they couldn’t refute our important contributions. “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare,” Winston Churchill once jokingly called us, although the epithet was perfectly apt. We did anything and everything to frustrate the Third Reich and set Europe ablaze, and we weren’t afraid to fight dirty.

“Looks like you’re the last one in for the week.” Richard frowned as he closed the cockpit entrance and made his way over and knelt next to me. I was already sitting in the area where the drop hole would open and I’d have to jump out with my parachute.

“You say it as if it’s a bad thing.” I glanced at my hands and clasped them together, unsure of what to say next. I knew that he had known Stella and even took a fancy to her. Though he never admitted this and would vehemently deny it if I ever brought it up, a girl could just tell about these sorts of things.

“How is it faring on your side?” His strong gaze demanded me to face him and answer. He wanted to know if there was any news about Stella, but there wasn’t any. I really didn’t want to talk about this with him, and I didn’t want to plant any nasty seeds of doubt. I wished his co-pilot had come back here to see me off.

I half smiled. “If I’m alive, then I’m faring well. I’ll let you know if I hear anything, you know…”

The signal light flashed and the metal panel beneath us slowly opened. A gust of wind encircled us and I gave a quick nod toward him. Though his facial expression revealed nothing, I felt like I needed to say something to him as a word of encouragement.

“Go, Emelie!” Richard cut me off before I could speak. He didn’t do it in a crass or dismissive manner, but perhaps in that moment he realized that he didn’t want to dwell on Stella any more than I did. 

I took a deep breath and scooted myself forward. With a little effort I slipped through the drop hole and went drifting toward land. The first time I had leapt out of a Royal Air Force transport plane, I could barely keep my wits. I kept imagining the Gestapo or SS strolling along a lonely stretch of road to find me splattered all over. I may be an alchemist, but I have yet to figure out a potion or elixir to make me airborne.

My parachute had been released as soon as I jumped out of the plane, and I fell silently through the night air hoping the white umbrella above me didn’t serve as an invitation to enemy gunfire. I thought all was clear as I nearly touched the ground until I noticed a convertible-top jeep barrel down the road and then slow to a halt.

I knew the patrol officer driving the trekker spotted me, and I cursed under my breath as I skidded across the field. My adrenaline went surging through me as I grabbed my knife from my jumpsuit’s outer pocket and cut myself loose. I rolled away and scanned the area, trying to decide whether to lay low or just make a run for it. The only thing I could see was the trekker’s headlight beam; the black of night enveloped everything else, including me. 

I grew up in the city, where we had streetlights and bright theater marquee signs. The one time I actually went on a trip to the forest where there weren’t convenient lights stationed to guide my path, I found out just how terrified I was of absolute darkness. I still didn’t like the dark, and I dared not move because I wanted to hear where the officer was. All I could hear though was my heavy breathing, and I was so anxious that the only thing I could do was press the back of my hand to my mouth to stifle the sound.

A shot rang out and I quickly dropped to my knees. I didn’t know what direction the bullet came from and I tried encouraging myself with the morbid thought that there have been plenty of people who survived gunshot wounds. I finally steadied my breathing and gripped my knife, waiting for him to make another move. However, I immediately bucked and dropped my weapon when a pair of arms enclosed me in a fierce grip. 

I swung my head back and gave him a good head-butt, making him cry out in pain and release me. I quickly turned around and delivered a left hook and dodged his fist when he tried to reciprocate. Although we couldn’t really see each other, we could hear and feel each other’s body movements in this deadly dance. I heard him swing at me again and I blocked, but not before losing my balance and landing on my back. Fighting in a jumpsuit could be cumbersome sometimes. 

“Who are you?” he asked in German, grabbing hold of me and dragging me by the scruff of my neck toward the beaming headlights. He shoved me against the front of the car and I slowly faced him with arms raised in surrender. I had to plan my next move very carefully.

“I’m from the Russian Liberation Group,” I answered in perfect Russian. “Praskovya sent me.” I thought I’d add that part since he cocked his revolver. The Russian Liberation Group had been sending in spies and other reinforcements for their Nazi allies for about a month now. Some of these operatives entered France the same way I had.

“She sent you?” He had switched over to speaking Russian. Though his tone sounded doubtful, he slightly lowered his gun. 

“You know us…we do everything backward, comrade.” I prayed the codeword we intercepted last week still held.

The back of my neck began to burn and I thought of what I could say next. He saved me the trouble when he slid his gun into his holster and offered me his hand. “Leave it to the Russians to send women to do a man’s job. What does Praskovya want?” 

I quickly grasped his hand, one of the easiest access points, and honed my magical senses, tracking the rhythm of his heart and the electrical currents in his brain. As his heartbeat slowed and his mind hazed, I spoke to him.

“What’s your name?”

“Karl Manfried.”

“How many other officers are in the Paris office?”

“Twenty six.”

That was a little more than I cared to handle alone. “Why don’t you go back to your headquarters and greet your comrades with a Molotov cocktail?”

He slowly nodded and let his hand slip from mine. He headed straight for his trekker and jumped inside. The jeep rumbled and slowly reversed, then made a turn in the direction of the city. By this time my hands shook from exhaustion and my head ached from the amount of concentration I had mustered to use body magic on him. It also didn’t help that I was hungry and irritated. In any case I needed to make it to my safe house even though it was apparently past curfew, and I needed as many officers off the streets as possible. Hopefully Karl would be the distraction I needed once I reached the city.

I pulled out my foldable bike from the pack attached to the parachute. After spending twenty minutes longer than I usually would setting it up, I unzipped and shed the jumpsuit to reveal a rather tight-fitting milkmaid’s uniform. I promised myself that I’d make it back to London just to shoot Ian for making me wear this.

I stuffed the jumpsuit into the pack and placed it in the little straw basket attached to the bike’s handlebars. I peddled down the road without looking back and took note of the Seine River that ran to my right. It looked like I was south of Mantes, just outside of Paris. I kept my eyes open for more trekkers, hoping that I could make it through without any trouble. 

When I made it to the city proper, I took some backstreets to avoid a few SS officers on patrol and pulled my bike up to an alley and slowly walked through. I scowled when I saw an officer in the middle of the alley, against the wall with his woman, blissfully lost in a dirty and quick cuzzy. They either didn’t notice or didn’t care when I walked by and wrinkled my nose at the scent of garbage and piss. 

I wondered if the woman was just another collaborator selling her body for food or gas, or an agent of the Resistance engaged in an act of seduction. Sometimes I wondered what went through women’s heads when they did this. I’ve used my red garnet lipstick twice to kiss men and enthrall them so they would do what I want, and those were the least arousing experiences I’ve ever had. If I were that woman, I’d probably be thinking about how much longer it would be before the deed was done, or why he didn’t get us a hotel room.

I grew more confident as I turned a corner and headed down another lonely street, but unfortunately fate would not have it be that easy for me. Before I was halfway down the street, two SS officers headed toward me from the opposite end and hailed me. Though I put on a stoic face, my fingers trembled and my heart raced. Our confrontation would be inevitable since they would be complete idiots not to question a milkmaid out riding her bike after curfew.

“Halt right there, mademoiselle.” The first officer, whose nametag read Adelbert, approached and grabbed hold of my bike.

The second, whose name was Gerhardt, grabbed my arm and spoke to me in French. “A little late to be delivering milk, isn’t it?”

“I…I was with my Pierre. I didn’t mean to take off so late.”

Adelbert leaned my bike against the brick wall of the closed shop we stood in front of. The menacing look in his dark eyes worried me more than the gun in his holster. “Well lucky for you that your sweetheart didn’t accompany you.” 

Gerhardt forced me against the wall with my back to him. “Is it the same Pierre who lives by Le Petit bakery?” He had asked the question in English.

“I’m sorry,” I said back to him in French, “I don’t understand much English.”

He ran his hands along my body, pretending to frisk me. Hey…one more grope and you’ll get a kick to your face!

“Check her bag, Adelbert.”

My body tensed and I quickly assessed my options. I could stun Gerhardt with a blow and fight Adelbert, or even beat him to the bag so I could grab my weapons. However a bullet in the back of my head would end it all. If he opened the pack sitting in the basket, I would be the next one in front of a firing squad. Suddenly an explosion went off a few blocks down, and the sky lit up. I prayed the mind-hazed Karl Manfried had carried out my order.

“Scheisse! It’s the office!” Gerhardt, with a bewildered look on his face as if he couldn’t believe someone would dare attack his office, began running in the direction of the fire. Adelbert drew his revolver and followed. 

I slid away from the wall and opened and shut my mouth. Thank goodness Gerhardt hadn’t broken my jaw. After rotating my aching shoulders I hopped on my bike and continued down the street, pedaling as hard as I could until I reached a winding road that led to the dark and quiet neighborhood near Vincennes where my safe house stood. I slowed and parked my bike at a small prayer chapel, taking my pack with me and quietly entering. 

No one sat or prayed inside, but a beautiful statue of the Madonna oversaw a corner full of flickering candles. I went to the back room where the caretaker stored his cleaning supplies and extra candles, and I crawled beneath the small table where a trapdoor lay hidden beneath a rug. I lifted it and pulled on the iron handle as I carefully slipped inside. It was tricky getting the rug back over and then closing the door, but I managed to do it and began trekking through a dark underground passageway. 

Though the path led me down a straight line, I wished I had at least swiped a candle. I felt like I was going to be swallowed by the darkness. I didn’t feel like going back so I just went at a steady pace and held my hands out in front of me just in case I stumbled. After walking through the underground passage for five minutes, I finally felt the false dirt wall that signaled the end of my journey. 

I recalled Ian’s instructions for getting to the safe house and I felt for the hidden lever and pulled; the false wall cracked open. I pried it open further and then opened a reinforced wooden door behind it. I quickly slipped through, covering the door the way I found it. I crawled up a ladder and pushed open a trapdoor like the one in the chapel, except this one opened into a tool shed. 

I supposed they really wanted to make me work to get here. I almost broke the trapdoor shutting it so hard out of irritation, and covered it with the rug that was in there. I listened for any noises—a voice, footsteps, or trekkers. When I was sure no one was nearby, I crept from the tool shed toward the back of the safe house which had an angel ornament hanging in the middle of the back door. I held my pack and slowly approached, giving a slightly urgent knock. I heard slow and hesitant footsteps and after a few seconds had elapsed, someone finally answered from the other side of the door. 

“Who is it?” a woman’s muffled voice queried in French.

“Emelie.” I gave a grateful but tired grin when she opened the door.

“It’s late, Emelie.”

“Yes, but I have gifts.” 

“From whom?”

All I wanted at this hour was a hot meal and a soft bed. “From 64 Baker Street.”

The woman nodded and smiled. “Then come in, Emelie, and make yourself at home.”

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Comments Off on The Tower’s Alchemist Chapter 3. Finished my script now designing demons.

Hi, Welcome!

This blog is your window into the daily life of a Simpsons artist. See what it's like work on a hit TV show!

I update this blog once a week, on Thursdays and (sometimes) Fridays. If you don't see anything new, just check back on one of those days.

My e-mail is: luis(at)luisescobarblog(dot)com

Both my books are now on Amazon. Pick up your own print copy today!

Buy My Art

  • Batman '66 One of a kind Sketch Cover Batman '66 One of a kind Sketch Cover $20.00
  • Deadpool's Secret Wars #1 original, on of a kind Sketch Cover Deadpool's Secret Wars #1 original, on of a kind Sketch Cover $20.00
  • Archie #1 Original on of a kind Sketch Cover Archie #1 Original on of a kind Sketch Cover $20.00

Most Read Posts

  • No results available

Featured Post

  • Using the Perspective Tool in Clip Studio Paint
  • Sketchbook Tour 04
  • Postcard Giveaway, Knowing When You Plateau, And More Patreon Rewards Dec 2018
  • Sell Your Soul: How to Build Your Creative Career Book Review
  • Real Artists Don’t Starve Book Review

Archives

Blogroll

  • Aimee's Site
  • Alex Ruiz
  • All Art Career
  • Catholic Cartoon Blog
  • Catholics Next Door
  • El Muerto Comic
  • Eric Canete's blog
  • Eternal Revolution blog
  • Fr. Roderick's blog
  • Grasiela Rodriquez
  • Haute Macabre
  • Javier Hernandez's blog
  • Jim Lujan
  • Jose Lopez
  • Lance's Blog
  • Larry Whitakers
  • Man Versus Art
  • Marcelo Vignali's Blog
  • Maria's blog
  • Mischa's Blog
  • My Deviant Art gallery page
  • My Deviant Art Page
  • My Sisters' blog
  • My wife's blog
  • Paul Wee's Blog
  • Raul Aguirre's site
  • Richie Chavez
  • Rosary Army
  • Sam Nielson
  • Shane's blog
  • Simpsons Collectionary
  • SQPN
  • Sr. Anne's blog
  • The Drawing Website
  • Thomas Perkins
  • Tommy Tejeda
November 2011
M T W T F S S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930  
« Oct   Dec »
  • Top


Luis' Illustrated Blog is proudly powered by WordPress. WordPress Themes X2 developed by ThemeKraft.
%d