Skip to Content Skip to Search Go to Top Navigation Go to Side Menu


Archive for May 2009


Cover Girl [pt. 3 | Pencilz 'n' Penz]


Sunday, May 31, 2009

Here comes the good part. It’s part three of the four-part series counting down to MoCCA Fest and the debut of my anthology, Oak & Linden. You can read part 1 and part 2 if you’re into tracing paper sketches, and I’ll also make one composite post on June 6th, the day of MoCCA Fest. – Prolongin’ Pat

cover-pencil

I tend to work at “half up,” which I learned from How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way. In other words, the original art is one and a half times the size of the printed graphics. The shrinking makes the lines tighter and disguises inconsistencies and little stray marks and the like. The standard for comics is to work on 11″×17″ paper and print at about 6½”×10″ and that’s the size I’ve been working. For a wraparound cover with bleed space at this same scale, I needed to work on some 18″×24″ paper. As I said a few weeks ago, I hadn’t done that since in the days of art school. I feel like a big boy again.

Here you can see the nice dainty traced pencil line on the right half of the page.

Here you can see the daintily traced pencil line on the right half of the page.

Now, it should be said that I’m very bad at drawing lightly. I’ve compensated by using blue pencils (specifically the Copy-Not Non-Photo Blue and Col-Erase Light Blue, both from Prismacolor, and both with an eraser on the end) that don’t reproduce in black & white. For this project I knew I wanted to use colored ink washes instead of my typical Photoshop colors and I didn’t want blue lines everywhere so I I had to compensate for my pencil mashing some other way. So I drew everything with regular pencils on a piece of drawing paper left over from sophomore drawing class, then lightboxed the lines onto a sheet of bristol for the final product. I usually leave my pencils pretty rough and finish the drawing while I’m inking. Well, this case is different, again, because of those ink washes. I figured I wouldn’t have as much leeway as I normally do to throw white (if you’re wondering, right now I use Pro White opaque watercolor) over all the lines I don’t like, because of how the colors would react on top of the paint. Thus, I drew some pretty tight pencils. I even used a ruler for the perspective lines! Almost worthy of being inked by somebody else, like a superhero comic.

But it was inked by me. I ain’t no sellout! (With Rapidographs—if you’re in the market for these technical drawing pens, wait for the back to school sales to get the the seven piece set. Every art store in New York majorly slashes the price at the beginning of each semester.) I didn’t fill in any major black areas because I’m totally into doing that with Windsor & Newton Designer’s Black right now. It comes out really, really black, like black hole black, but unfortunately it’s a guasch, not an ink, which means it’s water soluble. So yet again, I’m compromising for those goddamn colored inks:

cover-ink02

Cover Girl [pt. 2 | The Sketchening]


Tuesday, May 26, 2009

At last, part two of the four-part series counting down to MoCCA Fest and the debut of my anthology, Oak & Linden. You can read part 1 first, and I’ll also make one composite post on June 6th, the day of MoCCA Fest. – Protractin’ Pat

Having settled on the title design, I realized I just might need to draw something on the cover. I turned for inspiration to a dream journal I kept fastidiously when I slept alone, but have mostly ignored ever since I moved in with Caitlin.

cover-thumbnail01

What, you can't tell what's going on here?

I was most on my dream writing game when I lived in Bushwick, which is very much like living in the Caribbean, and lots of my dreams involved Carnival or block parties or fairs. There was also a running theme of small rodenty animals whose heads I needed to crush with my shoe. One time I looked closer and the beast was be a cute kitten and I loved it and gave it a drink of water. Once it was a baby panda with human hands. Usually, though, it was a hideous rat-weasel with matted fur and I really wanted to smash it. I guess what I’m saying is, I landed on a Coney Island wrap-around cover with lots of dream elements on the front, and all the characters that appear within the book on the back.

I realized that with all these foreground elements, I’d need to first get a handle on the background:

cover-thumbnail02

Then I put on some tracing paper and placed all the people:

cover-thumbnail03

Cover Girl [pt. 1 | Tha Title]


Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Here it is: the post you’ve all been waiting for. The previously promised process post. Okay, so it’s a part of it. I’m counting down to the debut of my upcoming awesome anthology, Oak & Linden, with a four-part series showing you how I made the cover. I’ll make one composite post on June 6th, the day of MoCCA Fest, wherein O&L will drop. – Pat “Patience!” Mac Bar

cover-logo01 I should say right from the get-go that you can click on all these pictures to see what’s going on a lil’ better. In the beginning all I had was a title, and I needed to make it a type treatment, or a logo, or whateva. As I often do when I want to make a logo, I started playing with Sharpie on tracing paper. This is a sketching technique I learned through Caitlin from her favorite prof ever, Charles Goslin. It really works because you stay loose, you have a really easy time seeing the balance of black and white, and you can also make changes quickly by laying on another piece of tracing paper.

cover-logo02

I swear it seemed like there were differences between these at the time.

The title comes from a Greek myth about a couple that takes in Zeus and Hermes, who are disguised as bums. The couple is rewarded for their hospitality by being linked together even after death, as intertwined oak and linden trees. There definitely had to be some wrapping and braiding kinda stuff going on. I landed on a basic concept, and I kept redrawing and refining on various pieces of tracing paper. Then, when I finally liked one of those, I used a lightbox to trace it on bristol with a Rapidograph pen. I scanned that, blew it up, printed it out and traced it again. That’s when I realized I didn’t need to do that last part, and I could just trace directly from the print out onto the big board, which you’ll see soon.

Like so (okay, actually youse can’t blow this one up):

cover-logo03

Tiptoe through the Tulips


Monday, May 11, 2009

Ooohh, yipes, my friends. Things are moving and shaking in the world of your old friend Pat. I gave notice at my copy shop job so I can do a short-term video game graphics job during the summer. I’m really glad to be getting out of this. In the meantime I’m working like a madman to get my anthology together for MoCCA Fest, which is mere weeks away. I haven’t been keeping up with my workout regimen, and the Wii Fit balance board is admonishing me hard. Still, I’m finding time to go to Star Trek, which was basically the funnest summer action blockbuster since Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and to draw naked ladies.

Tiptoe Through the Tulips