Four Days Until Free Comic Book Day!

Shazam! Four days until Free Comic Book Day!

Only four days left until Free Comic Book Day! I've mentioned before that I'll be at Four Color Fantasies in Rancho Cucamonga, California at the big signing event. Owner Chris Brady has an auction for the Hero Initiative, and I'm donating this Mary Marvel sketch to it. Minus the FCBD countdown balloon, of course.

Woo-hoo! Free Comic Book Day! It's gonna be great!

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Conventions, General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler Conventions, General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler

Adventures at C2E2

It’s been five years since I last did a convention in Chicago. The Wizard Conventions weren’t enough of a draw to get me back to the Windy City, plus the show itself was in and not actually Chicago. It wasn’t conducive to spending some time in Chicago proper.

Wait, the pitchers HIT? It's madness!This year, though, Reed Expositions was putting on a show, and I just love their New York Comic-Con. I knew that they’d pick up the ball dropped by Wizard when they shifted their focus to more of a pop culture focus. So Bob Ingersoll and I made the drive out Wednesday night.

Bob’s daughter and son-in-law live near Wrigleyville and had kindly offered to put up with us, er, put us up for the weekend. Ah, the siren call of free lodging. They’ve got a great place, too, in a fantastic neighborhood. Chicago is the basis for Deco City in Love and Capes, so it was nice to be in a neighborhood that’s much like the one Abby’s bookstore is in.

I really like Chicago. It’s a lot like Cleveland, if we had, you know, more people and stuff to do. But there’s a similarity that makes it very comfortable. I walked back to the Watchin' the gameapartment from Starbucks one night and it was just so nice, for lack of a better term.

My agent (yes, I can officially say that now) had offered to take me to a Cubs game, something I’d always wanted to do. I love baseball, and the Cubbies have a charm to them that’s hard to describe. My agent also got tickets for himself, Bob, Bill Willingham and Steve Sullivan.

Steve was a very pleasant surprise on top of an already great afternoon. He and I met in Chicago back in ’92, and did some work together. When I stopped doing Wizard Chicago, he and I had lost touch. So it was great to spend the game getting reacquainted.

The game itself was wonderful. It was a perfect day for a ballgame, and Wrigley field has a charm that makes it just great. It’s nice to see a ballpark in a neighborhood, rather than in a city or outside of one. It’s got a very homey feel to it.

Yeah, a close up would have made this picture funnier, wouldn't it?
Some of the charm became a problem, though. Wrigley’s got an old-style manual scoreboard, so it only puts up the number of every batter. Not a horrible issue, except that it was also Jackie Robinson Day. Every player, every single one, wore the They have no idea what they're missing.number “42”. So every time someone came to bat, it was #42. I had no idea who was who.

The game was good. It was a back-and-forth score, with the Cubs actually bringing the tying run to the plate in the ninth. And then they lost.

So I had the complete Chicago Cubs experience.

Like many places, though, Chicago is missing the dark yellow perfection of Bertman’s Stadium Mustard. It’s just not right. The hot dog I had was tasty, don’t get me wrong, but it just wasn’t a proper ballpark dog.

Break Space

C2E2 is the official name of the new Chicago con. First let me say, it’s a pain and a half to use that as a Twitter hashtag. You’ve got to go back and forth between the letters and numbers board on your iPhone. Something to think about in the Digital Millennium when you’re coming up with a name.
Striking a pose.
Name aside, the show was pretty good. Move-in was easy as could be, and Bob and I set up without too much effort at all. C2E2 has a pretty good professional pre-show, where I could actually go around and talk with some of the people that I needed to talk to. I can’t say that about Hmmm, I really need to get a watch, don't I?every show. (I’m looking at you, San Diego.)

Sales were good, too. I’d never actually exhibited Love and Capes in Chicago before, so to some degree it was a whole new audience. The collected editions of the book sold really well. I left with nine, and considering what I started with, that was phenomenal. Individual issues sold much slower, but given that 1-6 were in the trade, and 7-12 are coming out in trade in a couple of months and were still available through order from Diamond and people’s local comics shop, I can’t complain at all.

The thing I have to figure out how to do better is taking commissions when in small press. I’ve got this theory that the people walking through small press can’t tell if the person behind the table is the creator or just the publisher. So I only did a few pieces over the weekend. I did a couple Crusaders, a Hellboy, and a Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man. But that’s my issue, not the show’s.

So, I was pretty happy with how I did overall. There’s room for improvement, but there’s always room for improvement, right?

Break Space

The show also attracted some A-List talent. So I got to chat a bit with Mark Waid and Gail Simone among others, as well as getting to see some people I haven’t seen since last con season or even my last Chicago trip.

I won’t name too many names, because then I’d forget someone. Better to err on the side of generalities. Excepting, of course, if I’ve got photos, like here.

That's a remarkably convincing smile on me there.

Plus, as usual, I made some new friends. Always the best part of shows.

Break Space

I did get to participate in the Iron Artist competition. It wasn’t, as I’d hoped, an Iron Man based event where we were each assigned a lovely, perky assistant and a bottle of bourbon, but instead based on the Iron Chef cooking shows. I, and three other artists, Jill Thompson, Raina Telgemeier and Jeff Brown were given an idea for a drawing, and then in ten minutes, we had to make it that cartoon.

All of this was to benefit the non-profit literacy group Reading With Pictures. Plus, his last name is easier to spell than the last guy's.A great cause and one I was thrilled to support. (Yeah, because it’s tough to get me on a stage otherwise, right?)

The first heat was to involve a flower pot, the Sears Tower, and poker! Yeah, go ahead, you come up with something.

I two flower pots on the ledge of the Sears Tower, one falling to his doom as he said “All right, I fall.” The other pot was saying “Dude, it’s call.” Yeah, not comedy gold, I know. I think “flower pot” made me think of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy where when the Infinite Improbability Drive is activated, two missiles turn into a whale and a geranium. There’s a page on what the whale thinks before he splats into the planet below. The geranium thinks “Oh, no, not again.” That always struck me as funny.

I thought everyone else’s was better. Jeff Brown’s awesome cartoon of Galactus playing power with a flower pot won the first heat. But then we got to do a second one. And this one was Batman on Vacation!

So I drew the first thing that came to my mind: Batman on a tropical resort, sitting by the pool Neal Adams-style, (mask, no cape, no shirt, board shorts and tons of chest hair) clinking fruity umbrellaed drinks with Catwoman, wearing a mask and a bikini, and Robin is forced to be the Cabana Boy.

This time, I hit paydirt. The judges both loved the facial expressions, and I won. I was the round two… IRON ARTIST!

Cool, eh?

Break Space

You should definitely check out the show next year. I know I’ll be there. I’ve already signed up.

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General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler

I Blame the Time Zone Change

Look at me being all imposing

I'm back from Chicago and C2E2 where I had a pretty good time. I'd love to tell you all about it, but even though I wrote most of the con report while riding shotgun with Bob Ingersoll, I'm still getting beaten with the work stick too much today to do anything in full. So, here's a picture of me and my booth for now. More will follow, I promise.

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General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler

All Quiet on the Northern Front

It's been a rough week, what with trying to finish the Lake County Captains book, getting ready for C2E2 in Chicago and other things. So there's no Wayback Wednesday today, and probably not next week either. It will be back afterwards, though.

In the meantime, I'm heading to Chicago tonight for the big show. I'll be at booth 1359. If you're going to be there, come on over!

I'll update my adventures as I can, but the best place to get the up to date info on what's doing is my Twitter feed. I'll try to put up some cleverness there.

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Hey, Look What's Arrived!

Two out of two Silver Age Babes agree that Love and Capes is awesome!
Yup, it's Love and Capes #13, available in both Free Comic Book Day and Retail flavors. The book will be out in 23 short days, and I will be out in Rancho Cucamonga that day doing Four Color Fantasies' event. All sorts of fun will be had.

After the first of May, the book will be available on the Love and Capes store as well.

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Wayback Wednesdays: Sweet Baby James

When I was at the Kubert School, Sweet Baby Jamesone of my least favorite classes was caricature. I just didn't think that I was very good at it. I did get good enough that, in a bout of cosmic irony, my first job out of art school was doing caricatures at the Geauga Lake Amusement Park. And doing live caricatures at parties and events has been a chunk of my income ever since.

This was a third-year assignment in caricature class. We had to take a famous person and merge them with an object. I don't remember my other classmates' concepts, but mine was to take James Taylor and blend him with a musical note.

I picked Sweet Baby James for a few reasons. I really like his music, and had just seen him in concert in New York City at the Paramount Theatre (and he rocked!) so he was on my mind. But, in those pre-internet days, getting visual reference was always a Wayback Wednesdayshassle. You had to buy these things called magazines and books, rather than Google image search a name.

Stone knives and bearskins, I tell you.

And since I was a fan of James, I had a few CDs that I could use as reference.

This is one of the rare pieces from art school that holds up well. I really like the inking on the face, and the sharp lines on his bottom jaw that really get the angles on his face. The dimensional musical notes are pretty good, I think the font works well, and the rainbow music staff adds some needed color. The only thing that bothers me is the 4/4 signature that's a little off. Odd that the lettering, always my strong suit, would be the weak thing on this one.

And if you ever get a chance to see James Taylor in concert, especially if it's an outdoor venue like Blossom Music Center here in Ohio (about which he supposedly wrote "Got your baby/Got your blanket/Got your bucket of beer" in That's Why I'm Here) do go. He's just amazing.

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Drawing Table, General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler Drawing Table, General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes Thomas Zahler

Baseball on the Brain

I've mentioned previously that I'm working on a Free Comic Book Day comic for the Lake County Captains. Now, I can reveal the cover…

Welcome to the Captains, hope you survive the expereince… oh, wait, that's the X-Men

In case you're wondering, that's The Captain, Skipper and Skippy, Grover the on-field announcer, and the three racing fish, Willy Walleye, Pauley Perch, and Buster Bluegill. You may remember them from when I designed their bobble fish.

Wow, it's less than a month away! I really need to start busting out pages, don't I?

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Chris vs. Previews - and the Winner is Me!

Every month, ace blogger and comics commentator Chris Sims (of The Invincible Super-Blog and Comics Alliance fame) takes on the voluminious Previews catalog. This month, among his non-Batman themed picks, he included:

Love and Capes Collection #2 - APR10 0387

I've come out as a dedicated fan of Love and Capes before, so I won't go through the whole thing again. But I will say that this trade includes the Wedding issue, which is not only a high point of the series, but ranks up there with Stan Lee and Jack Kirby's "Fantastic Four Annual" #3 as one of the best wedding comics ever. You should read it.

It's in the Premier section from IDW. Order code APR10 0387. And it's only $19.99!

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