Helloooo, Briscoe...
In the midst of this crazy con rush, I mentioned that I did a Brisco County, Jr. piece as a commission. It's late, but here it is.
I got to see John Astin at FanExpo from a distance. I didn't get the chance to actually talk to him, as he had a bit of a line. But even from a distance, you could see that pop and energy. And he's been on so many shows that I loved: Addams Family, Riptide, Night Court, and, of course, Brisco County. Next month I'll be at Detroit Fanfare, and Mr. Bruce Campbell will be there. I'll get to see two of my favorite actors from that wonderful and cancelled-too-quickly (Fox, what a surprise!) show. Maybe I'll show him the piece, too.
And, if anyone wants to buy the license to produce Brisco County comics, you let me know.
It's Shark Week in the Dallas Metroplex
The best way to get work is to leave town. And the afternoon before I left for Spider-Man Weekend,
I got an e-mail from the Fort Worth Weekly, one of my favorite clients. They needed a cover talking about shark-like lawyers in the public school system.
Later that night I was telling my Dad about it. "What are you going to do?" he asked. "Well," I said, "I sent them the rough half an hour ago…"
After I got back into town, I had to take it from rough to finished. It's actually a pretty standard turnaround time for newspaper-based work. Besides, I worked at a newspaper for four years in my early days, I'm used to the pace. So I hunkered down and got to work.
The story runs today and you can see the final cover at their site. I'm posting the roughs and inks, and the final without type, too.
Every Time You Call My Name, I Heat Up Like a Burning Flame
I know you haven't even seen the first issue yet, but I'm well into the fourth issue of my five-issue IDW Love and Capes series. I thought I'd share the cover for #4.
The covers are often the hardest part. I treat them like one-panel gags that don't need to have anything to do with the story inside. Sometimes they do, of course, but I don't feel bound by that. They're kind of like Betty and Veronica covers that way.
Complicating things is that IDW and I are doing variant covers for each issue. My friend Chris Bailey, animation director of Hop, Alvin and the Chipmunks and way more than you can imagine is doing the alternate cover for this one. He'd asked for a layout, kind of an idea starter, and we were working on one that was okay, but didn't quite sing.
Then, I had an idea for my cover. As I started to lay it out, I realized that it would be a good Thom Zahler cover, but it'd be an amazing Chris Bailey cover. So I contacted Chris and said "Hey, if you're not too far, would this be a better cover." He said yes, and I have since seen that cover. It's achingly beautiful, and I'll be sharing that soon. But not right now.
Unfortunately, that left me without a cover. One of the ways I figure out the cover image is figure out what I haven't done. That's how Darkblade appeared on the cover of #8. I realized one of my favorite characters, Doctor Karma, hasn't appeared on a cover, so I thought about him.
I had this idea for Karma to be at a talent show, sawing Mark in half with Abby as his assistant. Too complicated, though. It didn't work… and then I thought: What about Abby as the magician?
So, what I wound up creating was this cover where Abby's using Mark's powers to fake a trick. I was a little worried about it, as for the cover to be funny, you have to know that Mark is the Crusader. There's no visual cue. Yeah, this is the 17th issue of Love and Capes, but every issue is someone's first. After
showing it around to my Secret Society of Super-Reviewers and on the Love and Capes Facebook page, I was encouraged to go ahead with the secret identity cover.
This is the cover I came up with. I think it's pretty funny, maybe one of the best covers in this run.
Issue five, though, is no problem. I've known that cover since I started this series. It's gonna be a stunner.
Stopping a War with Love
This year I'm participating in Wonder Woman Day. It's a day designed to promote and raise awareness of domestic violence. I've created and am donating a piece of artwork for the New Jersey area charity auction that will benefit SAFE in Hunterdon, the local Crisis Center and services. It's done as a tie-in to National Domestic Violence Awareness Month.
I've drawn a piece with Wonder Woman and Amazonia. I've formatted it so that it's a four-panel design, with the initial rough, the tight pencils, the inks, and the colored version. I thought highlighting the process might make it a more interesting piece. You can see how to bid on my piece, and many others, here.
Click on either image to see the two princesses embiggened!

















