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Sweet!Comics

@sweet-comics

Inspiration and Cool Comics We Want to Read
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reblogged

This is the cover image I painted for the newest issue of Dirty Diamonds! Issue 7: Imagination is a an ALL-GIRL comic anthology featuring over 60 artists, many of whom are my dear friends and all exceptionally talented. The >>KICKSTARTER<< (also linked above) ends in 4 days, and it’s SO CLOSE to being funded. Please consider pledging! Most of the funds will go towards paying the artists, which is why the goal is so high. Your pledge helps 60 amazing female comic creators pay their rent. 

I really enjoyed painting this. I wanted to create a bold, simple composition with bright blue as the main color. Painting water is very satisfying.

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On days like this Sam Wilson calls in Black to the Avengers and refuses to go into work.

I imagine he spends his days this week at the VA with Black vets and they sit and talk and cry praying they’ll be alive tomorrow and the next day because cops don’t really give a shit about a Black vet with PTSD.

What do y'all think the other Black characters are doing to cope today?

[non-black fans your only place in this post is to reblog and like, btw]

I feel like Luke Cage spent a long time sitting in the dark, staring at his hands. He knows he can’t save everyone, but some part of him feels sick… he can deflect bullets, but his brothers and sisters can’t. After a few hours, he kisses his wife and daughter goodbye and goes to his neighbours, knocking on doors. Checking on Black mothers who’ve lost their sons. Checking on Black kids who have to relive the horror on TV every day. Quietly talking with the Black men who aren’t expected to feel, to react. Luke Cage can’t save everyone. But he’ll damn sure be there for his people.

Misty Knight does her hair. Monica Rambeau does her hair. Anissa Pierce (for my DC peeps) does her hair.

Each of them reaches up to the crown of her head and combs through and/or retwists her hair, massaging sweet-smelling oils through it, detaching unwanted tangles, guiding it into its natural order. Each woman has been told by many different people how she shouldn’t wear her hair natural, how she should cut it, straighten it, tame it, how it would be more “practical” and “professional” and even “respectable” that way. Each of them spends some time on the tactile self-care of this obviously and proudly Black portion of her Black self, standing up straight as she does, her head high with pride, bowed to no one.

And when she’s done and dressed again, each woman goes out to fight for us, for justice, crowned with her beautiful natural hair.

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reblogged

Happy Father's Day to the Dads of DC Comics!

Today is Father’s Day so if you have a dad or someone you think of as a dad and they love you and you love them, I hope you have a good day. To celebrate I am once again offering my apologies to Dr. Seuss and offering a poem for the day.

(ahem)

There are dads who stealthy

And dads who are wealthy

Dads who give the evil eye

image

And dads who are filled with pride

Dads who will give you hell

And dads who can teach a spell

Some dads truly are the pits

And some dads understand that sometimes all you can do is sit

Some dads are faster than light

And some dads always say what’s right

Some dads come to their role quite late

And some dad’s will do anything to change their child’s fate

There dads who are protective

And dads who are reflective

And some dads who, after all, were detectives

The dads of DC come in all sizes, big and small, And then there are dads who aren’t fathers at all

I miss my dad - give yours a hug for me! Have a great day!

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Theory: Frank Miller's recent work is good, but DC have no idea what to do with it

Above: I recoloured that recent Wonder Woman cover Frank Miller did for DC last week. Mine on the left, DC’s on the right. I did this to demonstrate a theory I have that despite the general critical consensus, there’s actually nothing wrong with Frank Miller’s recent art- it’s just that DC don’t know how to treat it.

In January of this year I tried out to be a colourist for Frank Miller at DC. Not because being a colourist for the comics has always been my dream, or because I’m the world’s biggest Frank Miller fan, but because I kept seeing some pretty awesome drawings of his being critically savaged. He’s a good artist, but people were talking as if these recent drawings were the scrawlings of a lunatic. I felt like I needed to step in.

Below is one of the Miller covers I recoloured for DC. My colours on the top, and DC’s original on the bottom. Here you can see the discrepancy between the potential I saw in these drawings, and what was actually being published.

I spoke to a couple of editors at DC and the consensus seemed to be that they loved what he was turning in. So why did every blog I read think it was the worst work he’d ever done? I believed that the colour treatment DC was giving to his art was in no way flattering to the type of work he was doing.

My friend Julian Dassai said it best: “His work is dynamic and, in some cases, verging on abstract. Trying to color his stuff with representational lighting and rendering is pointless, whereas a flat, graphic approach (or just leaving it in b&w) allows the energy to jump off the page.” My colour job, followed by what DC actually published:

Frank is an artist who is constantly evolving, and his new work seems to be somewhere between Jim Mahfood, Sergio Aragonez and Ralph Steadman. It doesn’t make sense to colour him as if he’s an Image comics artist from the 90’s, all gradients, shadows and shiny metallic finish.  

Here’s another one. Again: my work on the top, DC’s on the bottom.

All these images I’ve posted so far have two things in common- they were all widely dunked on and derided when they first went online, and they all prompted responses of “WHOA, COOL!” and “I LOVE THIS!” after I recoloured them and circulated them amongst my friends. So what happened here is ol’ Frank became the butt of everyone’s joke when actually, there was nothing wrong with his drawings.

So how did this happen?

Well, check out Frank’s work in the Sin City comics. When Frank works in black and white, he’s a one-man band. But when he works in colour, he hangs back and gives the colourist a lot of space. He knows that colours and inks are two halves of a whole.

Above is a page from 1986’s The Dark Knight Returns. You can see just how much trust Frank placed in his colourist, Lynn Varley, to finish his work. As you can see, some of those panels aren’t even THERE in the original inks. Panel 6 is just an empty box. 

This approach has been proven to work very well, but the problem is it places the burden of the image’s success or failure squarely on the colourist’s shoulders. And if the colourist and Frank aren’t on the same page, we end up with terrible covers that are the laughing stock of the whole internet.

It’s funny- even Lynn Varley could screw up colouring for Frank. Two years after their critically acclaimed work 300, they made their most widely panned book of all.

Lynn’s computer colouring on Dark Knight Strikes Again has all the invention and nuance of her colouring on Frank’s earlier work. However, her experimental digital art just isn’t a good fit for Frank’s traditional, brusque inkwork. The artwork in the book suffered a generally poor reception from fans and critics alike.

I took a pass at colouring DK2, too. I include this not to throw shade on Lynn’s work, or to say that I’m a better colourist (I’m not), but just to support my claim that there’s nothing wrong with Frank’s pencils and inks in even the book that was generally regarded to be his worst. His lines have character and energy and do everything they need to do to tell the story, and with the right treatment would have looked pretty great.

We can apply the same lessons to Frank’s most recent work. I’d read a whole comic that looked like either of the recoloured images below.

DC liked my stuff, but they’re happy with the guy they already have colouring Frank’s work, and so my experiment has to run its course. Still, I want to believe that there’s something in here that we can all learn from.

It’s important to pick the right team, and to utilise a stylistic approach that’s harmonious with what the rest of the group are doing. If you don’t, you might just end up with something terrible even though you worked your butt off. As we’ve seen, it can even happen to an exceptional talent like Frank. That’s a scary thought.

Thoughtful thoughts on the marriage of comic book drawings and color by Harvey.

<3 your colorist

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czapbooks

Czap Books 2016 Publishing Schedule

Czap Books is proud to announce another year of celebrating the poetic, personal, and the weird in comics. In 2016 we’re excited to present new work in English by Brazil-based artists Puiupo and Adonis Pantazopoulos with their visceral Úlcera, a sci-fi headtrip in the vein of Jodorowsky by way of Masaaki Yuasa. Our Winter 2016 release will collect Jessi Zabarsky’s adventure-shoujo series Witchlight, about figuring out how to be whole again. We’ll also be releasing new issues of Ley Lines throughout the year. Expect new work from Aaron Cockle, Mimi Chrzanowski, Kevin Czap, and Laila Milevski in this series of comics inspired by the arts.

Úlcera - Puiupo & Adonis Pantazopoulos

Bored and restless, Úlcera ditches the reformatory to get mixed up with a shady organization associated with the Tower, an ancient structure once belonging to the devotees of Iora. It’s there that she becomes witness to a psycho-spiritual war being waged against the Tower’s current inhabitants, the depraved Ambidextrous. Meanwhile up in the Tower, the prince’s outcast wife Mirra is being pulled, mind and body, to join Iora’s purifying war.

Originally self-published in Brazil, this newly-translated English edition from Czap Books is the first major North American release from both artists. MAY 2016

Witchlight - Jessi Zabarsky

A whirlwind of chaos seems to follow the witch and con artist Lelek wherever she goes, and while she excels at potions and evasive magic, she doesn’t really know what to do with a sword. The roguish vagabond sees a chance to eliminate this disadvantage when she kidnaps Sanja, a shy village girl. The unlikely pair grow more entangled as they travel together - Lelek learns about strength, gentleness and her own limitations, while Sanja learns more about the traumatic past behind Lelek’s bravado, and both stumble their way through the difficulties of growing close to another person.

Witchlight collects all of Zabarsky’s lushly illustrated shoujo adventure series into one volume, including all-new material and the heart-gripping conclusion. DECEMBER 2016

Ley Lines 2016

Czap Books and Grindstone Comics (run by L. Nichols) will work together again in 2016 to present another set of Ley Lines. Published on a quarterly basis, the series is a platform for cartoonists to directly engage with influences beyond the realm of comics. The 2015 catalog was praised for being “gorgeous… flawlessly curated” (- Nick Francis Potter) and 2016 promises to continue in this direction. Our slate for this year will include:

  • Aaron Cockle on Art and War, feat. W.G. Sebald, Werner Heldt, Sappho, Anne Carson, and Edgar Degas FEBRUARY 2016
  • Mimi Chrzanowski on Hieronymus Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights MAY 2016
  • Kevin Czap on Bas Jan Ader AUGUST 2016
  • Laila Milevski on Gothic Architecture NOVEMBER 2016

Ley Lines is printed by Issue Press and will have a run of 500 copies per book thanks to assistance from Koyama Press. Subscriptions are available now throughout the year on leylines.storenvy.com

 Koyama Press is proud to support this great subscription series!

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d3-14

The Black Comics/Animation artist MEGAPOST You’ve Been Waiting For

So, awhile ago I hit you guys up for some examples of comic art excellence. THANKS FOR YOUR AMAZING RESPONSE! I think that post reached 400 people! I’ve compiled the answers that jumped out to me as well as some of my own in the list below. Give these guys your eyes, moneys and work!

Tiffany Ford aka toffany:

chriskindred Chris Kindred:

Gyimah Litsitso Gariba ggariba:

Afua Richardson

Chris Visions chrisvisions:

Lamar Abrams neo-rama:

leseanthomas Lesean Thomas:

Sanford Greene sanfordgreene:

Spike Trotman :

Richie Pope richiepope:

Khary Randolph kharyrandolph:

Woodrow Phoenix woodrowphoenix:

Chase Conley chaseconley:

(partial to this image for some reason!)

Shawna Mills lazymills:

Toby Cypress tobycypress

Dave Crossland davecrosland:

Valentine de Landro valentinedelandro

Olivier Coipel: 

Adam Hines:

Damon Moran telodyne

If that shit right there don’t make you feel good, man… I don’t know what the fuck to tell you!

Ed: I meant to put felipesmithart on here:

And my homegir buckycee reminded that I forgot about the homie Johnie Christmas:

ANd while I’m at it, let me throw in 

and Ted Lange IV hellotedward:

…That said, I’d like to see less sausages on this menu. You guys got any more suggestions of another variety?

and now that we’ve gotten that out of the way. What about writers( who draw or don’t draw their work)?

In case ya’ll forgot about this. 

I’m gonna throw on @fredbread:

…cause I was looking for his site to pass on, and it wasn’t on this post. And he’s dope.

Also I had the pleasure to recently meeting @whimsicalnobodycomics​, or Whit Taylor, who I have worked with in the past on occasion. Definitely check out her work. 

…on that note, also worked with @shannondrewthis​ on the Nib for Medium. She’s dope:

…I didn’t mention it, but I make comics too. I made this post. I’m @d3-14 and I’m excited by how much this post has gotten around,

-deuces

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bighatdino

Such an awesome living-list of artists.

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toffany

what an honor, thank you!

Amazing master post of artists via @toffany! (I’m sure there are millions of artists that can be added as well! Keep it going!!)