Luis' Illustrated Blog

Simpsons Storyboard artist. Artist and storyteller. Exploring how to make a living, by being creative.
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    • 04 Juggling overlapping art decisions
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Why I chopped Quentin Tarantino’s head off. More about My Drawing Website. My current obession.

September 6, 2012 in SOME THOUGHTS, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, WEBSITES

THE SIMPSON NEWS – Why I Chopped Quentin Tarantino’s head off.

Simpsons Quote:

“This is indeed a disturbing universe.” – Maggie Simpson

I’m not a Quentin Tarantino fan nor am I a fan of his movies.

I’ve never met Mr. Tarantino.  It’s possible that if I did, I might like him and think he’s a great guy. But from interviews, documentaries, and other things like that, where I’ve heard him speak, he’s rubbed me the wrong way.

How it began

A long time ago, back when I was working on Season 8 as a Layout Artist, sometime in 1996, I was put on Show 3, Directed by Chuck Sheetz.

I was given the storyboard for the show and took a look at what we were going to be tackling. It was the Sherry Bobbins show and I thought it was very funny.  Then I saw the Itchy and Scratchy section of the show.  I thought it was awesome and decided I wanted to do it.

Some Directors ask the Layout artists what scenes they want to work on, while others simply assign them a section they think fits their strengths. My preferred method of getting layout scenes was simply to get them assigned to me. This time, I made an exception.

I walked into Chucks office and I asked for the Itchy and Scratchy scenes.  I didn’t know if he had another assignment in mind for me. I just wanted to do those scenes.  I explained to him how I REALLY wanted to draw Itchy chopping Tarantino’s head off because he annoyed me.

He told me it was fine and also assigned me some other scenes, since the Itchy and Scratchy section was so short. This was the first and last time I ever asked a director for a specific section like this.

The fun part

I returned to my desk triumphant.  This was going to be fun.  I was going to go to town on these scenes.

One of the best parts about working on the scene was just making fun of how much Tarantino uses his hand when he talks.  I think I had recently seen him interviewed in some talk show and it was fresh in my mind.

I over acted the heck out of the poses during his lines. So much so, that I didn’t think there would be time to put all my poses in the short amount of dialogue he had.  I just wanted him to look as erratic as possible.

It turned out looking alright in the end.

The Irony

I don’t ACTUALLY want to harm Tarantino, I thought perhaps it would be cathartic to do it in cartoon form, knowing I wasn’t actually doing anyone any harm.

On hindsight, I think the REAL reason I wanted to chop of his cartoon head off was because of that ear chopping scene in RESERVOIR DOGS. When I saw that movie and that scene came up, it made me feel sick to my stomach.  I was like,

“What WRONG with this director?! He’s sick in the head!”

I guess this spoof was my attempt to “get even” for making me feel so sick.

Well, the joke was on me.

After all, the scenes I was working on where spoofs of that very scene. When it was time for me to actually work on the scenes, a horrible realization came over me. It never occurred to me that in order to do the spoof justice, I had to…well…do  research. I had to see how it was done in the actual movie.

In other words, in order for me to do this spoof, I had to look at the ear chopping scene in RESERVOIR DOGS, over and over and over. Analyzing it, freeze framing it, playing it over, ACTING IT OUT. I had to LIVE that scene in order to get the movement right.

“Why did I chose to do this?! Aaah!”

It came back to bite me in the butt.

I also had to do the same with the Pulp Fiction Dancing scenes. But that wasn’t nearly as bad. And it was much more fun to breakdown the dancing in those scenes, so I could pose out my drawings.

It didn’t take away the bad taste in my mouth I ended up with having to see the RESERVOIR DOGS scene so much.

The Catharsis

Well, perhaps it fueled me more when I finally got to the head chopping part.  I made sure to make it as silly and cartoony as I could. I made the head bounce like a rubber ball when it hit the ground and added the tongue sticking out.  I also added a small swagger to the decapitated  body as it took a step back before he fell forward, butt in the air. Too bad this last bit wasn’t quite timed the way I had seen it in my head.

I drew the scenes really fast. Faster than I’d ever drawn any scenes before.  There were just so many poses. By the time I was done, the scenes were huge. Some of the biggest ones I’d ever done.

It turned out the be one of the best looking scenes I’d ever drawn too. So much so, that I photocopied the scenes and I still have those copies at home. It’s one of maybe, three scenes that I ever did that with.

So yeah, it was fun and satisfying for me to do that scene in the end. But I think Tarantino got the last laugh, considering I had to look at that ear chopping scene so many times to do it.

 

When I was working on this episode, I didn’t really have a convenient way of looking at the reference I need.

This week in my e-mail, I write about the archaic method I used to reference the movie.

It was pretty sad and pathetic.  If you missed out on that info and don’t want to miss out again, sign up to receive the e-mails from me. Sign up in the side bar or in the opt in at the bottom of this post.

WEBSITES – The Drawing Website Update

Here’s a short update of where I’m at, with the launch of The Drawing Website.

I’ve created a Twitter handle for the site.

It’s: @DrawingWebsite.

It doesn’t have an avatar yet. It’s on my list to do.  I just need to get the site up and running before I tackle smaller things like that. You can follow the site if you want. I’ll see about throwing update on there.

I’m also trying to finish up the two site mascots for the main page.  Here are my roughs:

And yes, they’re holding pencils.

Did I mention I’m treating the drawing site like a Kung Fu class? Well, now you know. Learn to draw like you would learn Kung Fu. You’ll have fun. I’m having fun already and I haven’t even launched the darn thing.

Get an e-mail about the site’s launch by signing up in the opt in.

SOME THOUGHTS – My new current obsession

Four years ago I wrote a post about my obsessive personality. Included in that post was the following diagram:

Well guess what? You can officially add some new unexpected obsessions to this list:

36. Business

37. Entrepreneurship

38. Marketing

39. Copy writing.

That’s right, I’ve become obsessed with this stuff lately. I’ve just been reading about it and thinking about it and I’ve even started putting it into practice.  It’s very possible that I’ll be writing far more about it in this blog, since that’s where my heads at right now.

Similar to the way I was writing about board games and role-playing games.

I hope that, when I do, IF I do, I can show you why I’m so obsessed with it and why I find it as creative as drawing and writing stories.

Oh, and by the way, “Drawing” should have been on the list above, but for some reason I left it out. Just imagine that number 10 reads: “Painting/Drawing”.

 

For more comics and stories written by me: COMICS AND STORIES

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Heavy rewrite on episode 2 of this season. Wreck it Ralph trailer. Pages 23-39 of my storyboards

June 7, 2012 in ART, MOVIES, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Wow, two heavily revised shows in a row.

I was assigned Act 1 of episode 2 of this new season and man does it have a lot of rewrites.  LOTS of work for me this week.

I was mostly finished with roughing out the fixes when the director came into my office and asked me to start on Act 3 once I was done roughing out Act 1.

So Wednesday I started Act 3.  Needless to say, I won’t have the final finished version of Act 1 done by the end of the week.

At least Act 3 wasn’t as heavily rewritten.  That’s gonna help out a lot.

MOVIES

Now here’s a movie that’s gonna make a TON a money.  I really should buy Disney Stocks:

ART

ALRIGHT! I’m really cranking out these pages considering I’m working on them like, twice a week.  It’s cool, since most of the planning is done. There were are a few spots where I left the final decisions of what I was gonna do to this part of the process. Specifically pages 30, 32 and 33. More on that below, underneath page 30:

 

Storyboard  page 23

 

At this point in the story, I knew I wanted to make what the characters where talking about visual. So thought a cut away would be good, I just didn’t really know exactly what the cut away would be.  I decided, since my character is Conan-ish, that the cut away should look like a Frank Frazzetta painting. I google some paintings and basically did parodies of the them.

Here, I was just trying to show a little bit of the day in the life of the character, so you can see that he used to have jobs but the sorcerers always ruined them for him. He doesn’t say it in the dialogue so I decided to add the information visually.

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.


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Began my rough boards for my personal project. Drawing eyes.

May 31, 2012 in ART, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, VIDEOS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

We had the day off Monday because it was Memorial day.  This left me with four days to do the work I have to do this week. I enjoyed having a day off, I just don’t like how I seem to get punished for having it.

I did manage to finish Act 3 on Tuesday which gives me the rest of the week to finish Act 1.

The reasons I haven’t gotten done with Act 1 was because it had a really problematic opening that the director really wanted to work out himself.  It was really tough but he solved it. Now I just have to make it presentable for the layout staff.

VIDEO

An excellent video on drawing eyes:

ART

This is the fun part of storyboarding for me.  This is the part I enjoy the most.  The first pass at building  the visual pace and narrative of a film or show.  After all this time, (two years) I finally get to see what my story will look like.  Once I’m done with this pass, I’m going to time it and make a rough animatic.  But first, I need to get the shots down as fast as I can.  All that work thumbnailing is finally paying off.   I don’t really have to think as hard as I did as when I thumbnailed the shots.  I just have to make rough clear drawings that tell the story. If it works at this stage, it will work once it’s cleaned up.  I’m not laboring over anything too much at this stage. It just has to be clear.

Once I finished this pass and get ready to time it out as an animatic, I’m probably going to need more acting poses to flesh out the action.

Anyway, here’s what I’ve done so far. The program I’m using is TOON BOOM STORYBOARD PRO
2:

 

The first panel above is in yellow because I just imported my original Post-it and stuck it in the panel to save me time.  I’ll replace the first panel during the rough animatic process, I just wanted to have something there in the mean time. I didn’t want to re-rough the drawing.

I’m drawing the rough pass in red because, well, if feels more comfortable for me to do so.  The red line makes it feel less final to me.  It’s just a working habit I’ve acquired.

 

 

The drawing of the raven above and below is really clean only because I used an old development drawing I had done during the treatment process. It was pretty much the shot I had thumbnailed so just went ahead an used it.

 

 

 

The page count gets screwy here because I had to “re-print” the last two pages. I had forgotten to put in the dialogue and descriptions in the last four pages:

29 scenes down, 400 left to go.

What do you think?

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.


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Back at work this week. Finally finished thumbnailing my project. Neil Gaiman on art.

May 24, 2012 in ART, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, VIDEOS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

First week back at work.  I miss the kids.  Though Ambrose seems to be waking up around the same time I do and hangs around as I get ready for work.

I’m revising Act 1 of show 1.

OH! And I found out about the new programs we’ll be using this season, which I wrote about last week.  Last week I was under the impression that we where going to start using a program from a different company. Not so. We just upgraded out Toon Boom programs, so now the Layout Crew is using Scene Machine, and the board artist are using Storyboard Pro 2.

Last week I went to a class that taught us to use Scene Machine, but I had no experience with Storyboard Pro 2.  Turns out that Scene Machine had so many similarities to Storyboard Pro 2 that it was pretty easy to pick up.  I like the new program. It fixes some issues that I had with the previous one.

ART

I’m FINALLY done thumbnailing the shots for my film. It only took TWO YEARS to get to this point.  It should NOT have taken this long:

I feel like there should be a parade or something to mark the occasion.  I’m so glad I didn’t pushed through and finished it.  429 shots! That’s crazy.  The Simpsons boards have this many shots.

Well, now the that the hardest part of the boarding is done, I finally get to execute the project.  I begin the process of making it come to life.  This is the fun part.  I’ve been waiting a long time for this.

So excited.

VIDEOS

I saw this video posted in different Social Media sites but never bothered to click on it until much later in the week.  Turns out it’s fantastic.  It’s Neil Gaiman (one of my favorite writers) giving a commencement speech at a college. I highly recommend you watch it if you’re into art or interested in it in anyway.


For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.


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Comments are appreciated as well.

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

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

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Last week on hiatus. More books on managing money. Thumbnailing page 9

May 17, 2012 in ART, BOOKS, BUSINESS, MY WEB COMIC, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

This is my last week of hiatus but that doesn’t mean I’m not going to be in the studio this week. I was asked to come in this Friday for a meeting. We’re going to be using a new program to do boards this season and the meeting is going to help us get up to speed on it. I’m curious to see what the program can do. So far we’ve been using Toon Boom’s Storyboard Pro. It’s a decent program, and it works for what it is, but we’ve had issues with the compatibility of the program and Toon Boom’s Pencil Check.

Not only that, but the board artists have been asked to do Quicktime movies of their boards in order to pitch their Acts in a easier way.  This has lead to trying to find a program that does this even easier than Storyboard Pro.  Even though, I think, Storyboard Pro does a pretty good job of doing this.

I’ll give you my two cents of what I think of the program next week. Especially since I’m going to be using one of the two program on my personal project.

BUSINESS/BOOKS

Just a bit of an update on the books I’ve been reading this week when it comes to money management and business:

INVESTING ONLINE FOR DUMMIES:

I haven’t read further than Chapter two, but I like it so far. Hand holds you into the investing thing and it’s very informative about what goes into the process.

LINCENSING ART 101 3rd edition:

Good little book that gives you an overview on the art licensing world and what to expect.  I’m reading this so that I can see about taking advantage of any webcomic or cartoon I put on the web. I also want to see if there’s a way to make a little money on the side with random personal art.

CREATIVE, INC.: THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO RUNNING A SUCCESFUL FREELANCE BUSINESS:

Got this on my Kindle App.  I started reading this at the doctor’s office on Tuesday while I was in the waiting area.  At first I thought I had made a mistake getting the book.  After all, I’ve done the freelance thing. I LIVED it.

Well, turns out there’s more to it that I hadn’t done, that, if I had, I would have probably been more successful.  It really should just take out the word “freelance” from the title.  It’s a really good book on how to start a creative business. I didn’t run my freelance career like a business when I did it. I should have.  I think know, if I ever work on my own again, I’ll do what this book advices. Very informative, even for people who are working on their own now. It might give you ideas for things you hadn’t thought to do. I recommend it.

On top of that, I’ve also been thinking about selling a few things on ebay. Mostly stuff we don’t use around the house, but I’m also think of putting up a drawing or two.  Mostly to continue to make some side money in order to pay off as much debt as we could.  I’ll think about this some more. In the meantime, I’ve got to research a bit on how it’s done.

ART

Page 9 is done! One HALF page left to go! So excited. I’m gonna get done soon! Hurry for sticking to it:

MY WEB COMIC

I’ve been taking advantage of my time off to work on my webcomic. It’s all outlined out. I just need to fix up a detail here and there and it should be ready to script out.  I’m taking a much more streamlined approach to the writing than I did with my cartoon above.  I just want to get it done as fast I as can.

That said, there’s quite a few characters and stuff to design.  It’s what’s taking up most of the time.  I’ve very excited about it though.
For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.


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.

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On hiatus and working on commissions. Attacking debt and working on accumilating wealth. Light at the end of the tunnel on my project.

May 10, 2012 in ART, BUSINESS, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Well, I’m on my first week on hiatus.  I’ve been spending a lot of time with the kids and doing a few commissions on the side.  Next week will be my last week of hiatus and then, back to work.  I’m enjoying my time off.

BUSINESS

My sister sent me a book for my Kindle App called: SECRETS OF THE MILLIONAIRE MIND by T. Harv Eker.  The book really opened my mind to the way I think about money and wealth.

A friend of mine at work who has his own business on  the side has this same mindset and he’s doing really well financially.

Reading the book has really made me interested in business, of all things.

In order to start putting the principles of the book into practice, I got a copy of Dave Ramsey’s THE TOTAL MONEY MAKEOVER. We’ve begun putting the methods in the book, into practice.  We plan to be mostly out of debt by the end of the year which will allow us to start truly making our own money.

I’m planning on making money off my art, comics and cartoons.  To do this I need to get out of debt and start pursuing money  making strategies that work.  This includes, investing any surplus money, which I’ve only done a little bit.

So, not only am I educating myself on story and drawing.  Not only am I researching the genre that my webcomic will fit in, but now, I’m learning business and money management. And for the first time ever, I find that prospect exciting.

ART

Man, compared to page 7, page 8 was a breeze to thumbnail:

 

I’ll be done in no time now.  Hopefully, by the time I get back to work, I’ll be ready to start boarding.

 

 

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.


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.

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My hiatus began this week. Finally finished page 7 thumbnails. Good storyboarding tips by Sherm Cohen.

May 3, 2012 in ART, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, VIDEOS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

So I finished my work and within the hour I was getting booted right out the studio door.  Well…not really, but it sure felt that way.  I worked as hard and as fast as I could on the boards I needed to do.  I started the clean up process late Thursday and it took me Friday, Monday and Tuesday to finish it all.  Wednesday  night and  most of Thursday I spent creating  a rough Quicktime Animatic of my board in order to find out how long the short would be.

I stayed late Wednesday working on the first rough pass of the animatic.  I showed it to the director and he had the same problems I had with it. Namely, it was too fast in parts. It was difficult to tell what was going on.  We went over, about a third of the shots and retimed them before we got too tired and decided to call it a night.  I told him I’d come in nice and early Thursday to tighten up some timing before he got in.  I usually come into work around 7am.

Imagine my shock, as I was ready to go bed that night, when I passed by my Jury Duty notice and realized I had to call in that night to see if I had jury duty the next day.  Turns out I did.  Everyone was counting on me being in Thursday and it turns out I had to go in for jury duty the next day.  Panic time.

Well, at the court house the next day, I had to make all the phone calls to all the director and production staff, about my situation.  They were less than happy about it.

Lucky for me, about an hour after I had done that, I was dismissed and on my way to work.  Not a moment too soon, since one of the production  coordinators had called me to ask about the location of my boards in my computer.  They were releaved when I told them I was on my way.

I got to work at noon and worked on getting the animatic finished ASAP.  The director and I managed to finish it on time and we showed it to the Head Director of the show, who really liked it.  He gave us a suggestion or two and it was time to finish cleaning up the  boards.

As I wrote above, I got done by Tuesday.  No sooner had the head of production received a copy of my board, when she was having me turn in my last time card so I could go on my hiatus.  It was pretty crazy.  But it was necessary.  They needed to process my as soon as they could so I could sign the right paper work. Otherwise I would have to come in the next day for no good reason.

I was originally suppose to have 4 weeks off, but because of how long this project went, I now only have 2  1/2 weeks.  That’s not so bad.

 

ART

FINALLY! I’m done with page 7 of my script:

That was by far the toughest part to get through.  The worst is over.  It should be down hill from this point on.  Yes, I have to thumbnail the climax of the story, but compared to having to rewrite an whole new fight scene as I went, it will be much easier to do.  Especially since the final conflict is much more internal the external.

I’m so glad I was able to get through this. I was really ready to quit. It was just so much work and I was suppose to be doing this for fun.  Now that it’s over, I can get back to having fun with the rest of the thumbnailing.  It’s still work, but it’s much easier to handle.

VIDEOS/storyboarding

The video below is an incredible resource for anyone who’s interested in doing boards or comics.  It’s a video by Sherm Cohen on THE 7 SEVEN HIDDEN PATTERNS OF SUCCESSFUL STORYBOARDS.

This is a great tool veterans and newbies to get acquainted or reacquainted with some basic shot fundamentals. For those who are new at composing shots, it should open your eyes to things to watch out for as you watch movies. It helps you get an eye toward figuring out why some shots are used at certain times.  I highly recommend watching it.

It’s also helpful to watch as a comics creator because much of the thinking behind what shots to use can be easily translated into comic book form.  It will help clarify you visual storytelling.  I’m tired of reading comics with that are very well drawn whose panels are confusing to read.

 


For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.


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.

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Trying to finish up my final Simpsons boards. Finally finished thumbnailing script page 7. Mark Waid goes digital.

April 26, 2012 in ART, BLOGS, COMIC BOOKS, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

So this epic storyboard I’m working on has turned out to be…well…epic.  It’s a little over 40 scenes (shots) long but there’s a lot going on in it. I was thinking I’d be done by Friday but I had three meetings with the director and the head director over it and there’s always something that can be done to improve it. I don’t mind, this is the process. How it all works. I especially don’t mind since the changes are all done on the first “rough scribble pass” which makes things easier for me as an artist to change or throw out.

The project has no dialogue and we didn’t know exactly how long it would be, so I also had to time my roughs in order to get an idea for it’s length.  It’s a fun project, I must admit. I only wish I didn’t feel so pressured to finish.  That said, I WANT to be done by Friday. Hopefully, somehow, I might be able to clean up the whole thing in two days.  Whether or not I will succeed is another story.

I might be going on hiatus later than I thought, because of this. Which isn’t horrible, but it will take away time from my commission work.

ART

Speaking of special projects, I’ve finally finished getting passed thumbnailing page 7 of my script. I just forced myself to sit down and really concentrate on getting through it. So far, I’ve thumbnailed out 327 scenes/shots. Far more than I anticipated:

I thought about it for hours before I got to the drawing it and by the time I sat down, I knew what I was going to do.  It went by much faster this way. It also helped that I watched a movie with a fight scene that game ideas.  I really should have been doing that much more before I sat down to draw the fights.  I just didn’t have time to do that since I worked on this stuff during lunch.  It would have taken all my time looking at fight in order to get inspired or get ideas. By the time I would be ready to draw, my lunchtime would have been over.

Perhaps, during hiatus or during the weekends I can be home and look at fight scenes I like to see if I can plug in some of what I see into the roughs I’ve already go.  It would be much easier to do something like that, now that I have something down, than it was when I was starting from scratch.

In any case, I think the worst is behind me now.  There’s still one more battle to thumbnail, but it’s not as physical as the ones I’ve just done.  It will hopefully be less of a handful.

COMIC BOOKS/BLOGS

Digital/Web comics are becoming more and more exciting to me.  I’ve been getting more and more into them lately.  For a long time I hadn’t been very interested in these comics because the quality of the art and storytelling hadn’t really been up to snuff. I really wanted a similar experience reading them as I did reading printed comics.   Well, it seems like that’s changed quite a  bit the last couple of years. Comics online and “digital only” comics, are just as good now, and sometimes, better than the printed stuff.  Part of the reason is that many professional comic creators have started doing Digital work.

The latest of the these is Mark Waid, who wrote KINGDOM COME and SUPERMAN: BIRTHRIGHT among many other things.  He decided he was going to start putting out Webcomics.  He’s also turned his blog into a “process blog”. Kinda similar to what I do here in my ART sections.

His Digital comics site will go up on May 1st and it’s called THRILLBENT. I’ll let you know what I think about it when it goes live.  But right now, I want to call attention to his blog Markwaid.com.  Mostly because I like how he’s approaching doing the comics.  Though his a professional comic writer, he’s quite frank about how little he knows about writing for digital comics.

Digital comics and comics on the web are a very different monsters than printed comics. What works in print doesn’t necessarily work in the digital medium.  So he’s writing about what he learns as he goes. He also writes about the approaches he takes and the experiments he makes.  I like to read this stuff because it puts us all in the same boat.  Also, he likes some of the approaches to digital comics that I also like.  This makes it seem to me, as I read his blog, that we’re on the same page.

Since I’m also going to put a web comic up, when I’m done with my current project, building on what Mark Waid discovers that works or doesn’t work seems like a good idea to me.  I’ve been reading his blog with great interest and I’m very curious to see how things pan out for him.

Check it out, if you’re interested in this digital medium.
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My Hiatus is coming, should I accept commissions? Ambrose turns two. Role playing with my kids. Worked on my project.

April 19, 2012 in ART, FAMILY, ROLE PLAYING GAMES, Storyboarding, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

On Monday I was told that I would be going on hiatus at the end of the week.  Not good news since we haven’t gotten our tax refund yet and I had to pay property tax earlier this month.  We’re not doing well financially. Lucky for me, something came up on the episode I’m currently revising that postponed my hiatus.

The episode I’m revising is short, so the writers have added an extra sequence at the end of the show that’s a bit epic.  This sequence may or may not be made BUT in order to find out if it will, I have to storyboard it. This has bought me, at least one more week of work.

In the meantime, I get to think up what I will do during my hiatus to perhaps make a little bit more money.  I might open myself up for commissions.  I’m not too sure if anyone would be interested though.  Especially since I will not except any commissions asking me to draw them SIMPSONS drawings. I would get in trouble if I did that.

If I made myself open to accept commissions, would you be interested in getting a drawing from me?

FAMILY

Ambrose’s birthday was Sunday. He became a 2 year old  We were planning on doing something small and intimate. Mostly because it would be too much work to do more and because he’s so young, ANYTHING we did for him at this point would seem very exciting for him.

We had made plans to go to our favorite park and have a picnic, just the six of us. Then we’d come back home and invite the cousins over for cake.

Things didn’t quite turn out the way we thought.  So many people asked about Ambrose’s birthday and what we were going to do that it turned out a bit bigger than we thought.  We had to cancel going to the park because we didn’t want anyone to come and meet us there.  We weren’t prepared for a PARTY at the park. We didn’t want to bring all the food and drinks everything that would be involved to throw a party at a park.  So instead we got the house ready for the people to simply come over at the last minute.

Well, Ambrose had a blast. He had so much fun with his cousins. He got a few airplane toys and a cool Batmobile toy. He was happy. Like I said, ANYTHING that was new and out of the ordinary that we did for him would be a big deal in his eyes. It was great, and in the end, Alesha and I were very happy how it all turned out.

ROLE PLAYING GAMES/FAMILY

Last week a wrote about playing a role playing game with my kids using RISUS,  making it out to be more of a LARP than simply a tabletop game experience.  Well, I tested out the game with them this Saturday with great successes.  The kids LOVED it.  I had Elizabeth and Dante go on an adventure to get back some childrens’ stolen candy from a wicked witch who lived in a scary cave.  They had a blast running around and play acting out their adventure.  So much fun in fact they wanted to play again immediately after it was done.

The next day we tried it out again. This time, we took it outside to the playground so we had a wider environment to play in. Unfortunately, Dante didn’t want to play once we got to the playground.  He just wanted to play at the playground. Elizabeth was very disappointed. I ended up running an adventure for her alone, but without her brother to play off of, she didn’t find it as enjoyable.  I’ll try again some other time in a different place and see if we can get the “magic” back from the first game.

ART

I must admit, it’s getting more and more difficult to finish working on my project.  I’m so burned out on it right now.  I really want to move on to my next project, which is a webcomic.  But I’m committed to seeing this through, because I think the finished product will look good.  I just don’t know how to finish this any faster than I’m currently doing. It’s a LOT of work coming up with shots. I mean, that’s why it’s a paying job.

This is what I’ve done in the last two weeks:

It doesn’t help that I’m writing this section as I draw it.

I gotta get this darn thing done. I’m so close to getting to the final stages.
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Working on show 22 last show of the season. Roleplaying plans for my kids.

April 12, 2012 in BOARD GAMES, FAMILY, ROLE PLAYING GAMES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Show 22 is the last show of this season and it has a MAJOR rewrite.  This is both good and bad.  It’s bad because it leaves me with a lot of work to do. It’s good because I’ve been given as much time as I need to do it.  Since I might go on hiatus once I’m done, I’m not really too much in a rush.  I’m also the only revisionist on the show because my partner went on hiatus.  So it’s up to me to rework the show myself.

Fortunately, some of the work has already been done by the Director and the Assistant Director, for Acts 1 and 2.  I just need to complete what they didn’t get to.

I’m still doing my job and trying to be as efficient as possible, I just don’t have the crazy deadline I usually have.  I hope, once I’m done, I might get to help out doing layout on a show. Otherwise, it will be hiatus time for me.

ROLE PLAYING GAMES/FAMILY

I hope you had a happy Easter. I did and my kids most definitely did. One of the reasons they had so much fun was because they got to play with their cousins at the family Easter party.

Among the many things they did and played was a game that, I think they invented there at the party.  It was a story game.  It went something like this:  the eldest was the “Director” or “Storyteller”,  and she told the story. In this case, it was many stories, mostly classic fairytales, like Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, Jack and the Beanstalk, etc, or Fables like, The Three Little Pigs. So the “Director/Storyteller” would tell the story and the little kids, would “perform” the story and everyone would have a role to play. Or in the case of Jack and the Beanstalk, all the little kids where Jack.

Well, I was only half paying attention to what they were doing because I was having a conversation at the time, but I thought it was very creative of them all.  The problem is that they went through so many stories, they soon ran out of them and the game stopped.

It wasn’t until the next day, when I started thinking about what they had done, that I suddenly realized my kids where practically Live Action Role-Playing (commonly known as LARP).  Then I thought, why can’t I do exactly the same thing they were doing at the party, BUT instead of them playing out a fairytale, they played out a role playing game adventure. That way, they had choices to make and we could roll dice to see what happened during certain parts of the story.

So then I started thinking about what system to use.  At first I thought I’d use SAVAGE WORLDS because I really enjoy the system and it’s fairly simple.  I even thought I’d make a Character sheet with icons instead of just the name of all the stats, so the sheets would be more kid friendly.  I went so far as to start roughing out these icons until I realized that there was a much easier and more kid friendly system I could use:  RISUS: The Anything Rpg.  It’s free, simple and kid friendly. I wrote about it on this blog a few years back.

Having decided that I was going to run a game for the kids, I had to come up with what type of game to run.  Fantasy seemed like the obvious choice, since I could make their adventure very much like a fairytale.

Then it was just a matter of making characters for them.  RISUS is a very simple system and it didn’t really take me too long. What took the longest was that I wanted to make their character sheets visual. For each of their stats, I wanted to have a little picture representing it.  Also, it would help the kids visualize what they were suppose to be pretending to be.  So this is what I came up with:

The first stat was just for the basic character cliche they were suppose to be playing as. The other stats I came up with, where meant to represent some attribute that my kids actually possess that might come in handy in the game.  For example, the “Fast” Stat for my son Dante is there because I didn’t want to put “Afraid”. I thought “Fast” would be better, since I think he’ll be doing a lot of running away.  I don’t think my youngest son, Ambrose (he’ll be 2 years old this Sunday) is actually going to understand what’s going on or is even going to play. BUT if he does, he’ll just copy what his big sister and brother are doing, so I’ll involve him, if he joins in with his “Copier” stat.  He’s also a cute kid so his cuteness might save the day. Who knows…

I’m not exactly sure if they’ll want to do it, or if they’ll like it, but I’ll give this a try and see how it goes.

I’m thinking, perhaps, their first adventure might involve a wicked witch, and candy.

BOARDGAMES

And now here’s something just as nerdy, if not nerdier:


For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.


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

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