Spent most of the last six hours doing marker colors for inset panels for a book that is a year overdue.
Wasn't paying attention to Twitter, where I'm becoming, uh... the patron saint of Zoomsgiving?
I'm all the way out of spoons, so I'll just say "no I'm not drawing a picture of that."
Here are some inset panels. The line work is very thin because I'm doing the heavy inks after the panels are back in the digital domain.
And here's what some of the panels look like in place, with dialog laid in, and the page spread artwork behind them.
I still need to add some outer glow to the panels and the dialogs (which takes WAY TOO MANY STEPS in Clip Studio Paint, but I digress) and probably nudge a bunch of stuff around, but the final product is starting to look like what I had in my head six months ago.
Anyway, now the new followers have something from me that is perhaps a little more representative of the boring day-to-day stuff I'd dearly love to be able to spend more time tweeting. :-)
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"We're only getting together for Thanksgiving" is 2020's answer to "we'll cover more ground if we split up" or "I'll go reset the breakers in the basement by myself."
"It's just for Thanksgiving, we'll be fine" is the 'wholesome family dinner' version of teenagers having sex in a car at the beginning of the horror movie.
Remember this, back in March?
Get ready for a bunch of heartbreaking sequels in early December.
Many of them are, perhaps, thoughtlessly enjoying (ugh) the race-based privilege of being able to safely (again ugh) ignore the pains of marginalized folk, but many of them (many MILLIONS OF PEOPLE) are quite consciously racist.
Do you have a list of things you don't enjoy doing, or perhaps things you actively dislike, but which you do ANYWAY for your health, or your family, or your friends?
The ONLY reason "wear a mask in public" shouldn't be on that list is if it's something you now enjoy.
tl;dr—like it or not, "wear a mask in public" should just be a thing we do now. On the way out the door? Phone is charged, wallet and keys are pursed or pocketed, mask is up, and go.
Put on a hat when it's sunny, bundle up when it's cold, wear a mask when there's a global pandemic.
I'm glad to know about Juneteenth, but sad that my 52 years of being white and embedded in more whiteness meant that I'm too damn old to just now be knowing about it.
Some thoughts:
1) I can observe Juneteenth by OBSERVING. Listen. Watch. Try to understand. Banish a bit of my own ignorance. 2) I can celebrate the Emancipation Proclamation without making that celebration all about me. Or even the tiniest bit about me.
3) As I understand it (still banishing my ignorance, one tiny whitewashed patch at a time), Juneteenth is a sacred day for an oppressed people. 4) Hey, I already have a model for how to (and how NOT to) observe days that are sacred to other people!
The "chop wood, carry water" methodology was a gift to me from my friend @dbrady, who once shared an amazing story about how he managed to be productive despite having only three or four "good brain" hours per day.
He wrote code for a living. Mornings were good, but after lunch he was... foggy. Couldn't think his way out of a wet paper javascript, and would find the phrase "wet paper javascript" hilarious.
The solution: In the morning he wrote ZERO code. He would look at the results of the previous night's QA and build reports, review the feature list, and then grab a stack of Post-It notes.
On them, he'd write notes to himself about the code which needed to be written.
When I was studying sound recording back in the early 90's, our instructor gave us a pithy bit of wisdom which has stuck with me across disciplines for nigh on thirty years.
But before I share, I need to define terms, as those have changed a bit.
For our purposes, a studio session had three parties in it: the talent, the engineer, and the producer.
The engineer is what I was training to be. The producer was paying for the product, and the talent was very happy to be invited.
So:
"The producer always knows when there's a problem, but never knows how to fix it."