Drawing bare trees takes a lot of patience. And you can't do it fast or you'll screw it up. I had to redraw quite a few of them in KENT STATE because I wanted to move on to other things, and they looked like hell.
Done beautifully here. This is how you do it, kids.
The trick is to stick to the proper sequence. You start with the main trunk and major branches, which gives you the basic shape of the tree. Ash, Oak, maple etc all have different shapes. Then you draw the smaller branches, then smaller still
But too many branches, especially for trees in the distance, and the visual gets clogged up. I'm right on the edge of that here, especially those trees dead center.
I used a .05 pen for the big branches, then a .o3, and finally the .01. Can't get any finer than that!
Bare trees at night are a different challenge. Trees in the foreground you can see sky through the branches, but in the background they're more of an impenetrable mass, except along the edge. Took some experimenting to figure out how to draw this.
Patience, patience, patience. try to shortcut it, and it looks like shit and you'll scrap it and start again. SO you might as well take your time. This panel alone took a full day, but I knew it would going in.
Aerial perspective is tricky to pull off, too. Things in the distance are fuzzier than in the foreground. The trucks and the soldiers are the important things in this panel, then a couple well-defined trees. But the background, too much detail there are & it'll be a mess of lines
The challenge is putting in enough branches to create the effect of a bare tree and get the shape right, but not so many branches that it looks like a solid blob of ink. I'd just do one tree at a time and adjust as I went. Ok, this area has enough lines, then move on.
This panel was super tough, because again I had layers of foliage extending into the distance. I started with the foreground trees, than drew each receding layer of trees, getting a little less detailed with each layer.
Next time I'll discuss drawing crowd scenes. The biggest frustration of all!
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The only self-destruction comparable to the Dilbert guy in comics history was Al Capp. In the 1950s, L'il Abner was the biggest strip in the land. Film, broadway, wildly popular, adding phrases to the national lexicon. Capp was a celebrity w/ regular spots on the Tonight Show.
10 years later he's overcome with hatred for the Sixties counterculture and went full Nixonian rightwing. No Youtube, of course, so he destroyed himself live on stage, going from campus to campus ranting at 20somethings to a cascade of boos.
Concurrently, it turns out he's serial sex predator, and attacked dozens of young co-eds on the lecture circuit. It all came out in court in 1971, and his career & rep were destroyed.
Abner limped along in a handful of papers & ended pathetically in 1977.
46 years ago, in Jan. 1976, the first big comics ”event” hit, “Superman & Spider-man: the Battle of the Century.”
It spawned nearly 50 years of similar attention-grabbing events, which have been the bane of both Marvel & DC.
But it's an interesting book.
By 1976, traditional comic books were in big trouble. Readership was plummeting, the biz was a mess, popular young creators were abandoning the field rather than be underpaid and exploited, and old guard giants like Kirby were past their prime. The “magic” was lost.
It was a Hollywood agent who pitched Supe vs. Spidey… as a film!
But the first Supe film was in the works, as was the wretched Spidey live-action tv show, so the companies weren’t interested. But as a comic book event? Publishers Carmine Infantino & Stan Lee dug that.
I guess this is what Marvel bigshots wanted, but every cover is a crowded fight scene, usually with a superdude flopping over backwards with one of Kane's signature limp-wristed poses.
Kane drew like 75% of Marvels covers in 1972, 73, 74 and 75 and one is pretty much the same as the other. Sweet gig for Gil, but I would've MUCH rather had him drawing stories.
"(Roger Stone) protege Jacob Engels appeared at a School Board meeting, blending in with concerned parents, to discuss sex education books. When Engels took the mic, he read aloud an explicit passage from (the graphic novel) “Gender Queer: A Memoir.”"
This is exactly what I've been tweeting about. And again here's Maia Kobabe's graphic novel GENDER QUEER being used as scare tactic in school board meetings.
This is the book outraged zealots and professional rightwing plants wave around at school board meetings.
This exact same performance is happening all around the country. The playbook was written by Christian Nationalist "think" tanks & creeps like Steve Bannon, & is bankrolled by dark money.
Since everyone is talking about the crisis at the @usps and the Trumper creep #DeJoy, the Postmaster General. These are mail sorting machines at the main Cleveland postal facility last August.
DeJoy ordered them torn out and they were left to rot in the parking lot.
Not removed and reused at another facility. TORN THE FUCK OUT, and purposely left outside to get rained on and ruined so they could NEVER be used again.
And no effort was made to mask what they were doing! You could see (and photograph) these things from the street!
When called on this, DeJoy insisted they were torn out "months" ago. Postal workers revealed it was just days.
With Jose Canceso trending for some reason, let's remember one of the greatest plays in baseball history, when a fly ball bounced off his head for a homer!
I was at this game!!
It was 1993, and the Indians were a very young, very talented, but not very good team. It was the final season in wretched old Cleveland Stadium.
Carlos Martinez, a journeyman 1B, hit a long fly ball to center. The rest is history.
Cleveland Stadium was huge (seating 75,000) and no one in my section could see what happened. There was no video scoreboard then. We thought it was an out, but Martinez started circling the bases. WTF? Then a dude with a radio in front of me started laughing hysterically.