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Set to Sea 83


The story so far...


Hey, we've been hell of drinking some homemade beer around here! The first batch came out pretty good. It was just a simple pale ale, but we were fulling expecting a chunky foul-tasting soup to emerge from the bottles. Instead, it's pretty much a normal beer! Like, one you'd pay money for and everything! It's got a little too much of a bitter aftertaste - maybe not a problem for some people, but a little much for us. I'll work it out the next time I try that recipe. We've got another batch already in the bucket - supposedly a Kolsch-style - so we'll see what happens with that one.




I thought maybe people would like to see a little bit of the process of making Set to Sea, so I put together a little demo thing showing the whole roughs, pencilling, inking thing, and a picture of my "workspace." This is all mostly vanity and procrastination, my apologies.


1: First I do a very rough sketch of the panel layout, not worrying too much about accuracy or perspective.
2: Then tighter pencils, loosely following the layout from the rough. This is where I nail down all of the perspective and "schematic" stuff. Often I'll have to attach bits of paper to the sides to draw out the vanishing points. I usually scan these pencils into the computer and bump up the contrast in Photoshop, for easier tracing. Sometimes I'll make simple corrections, too - moving a guy a little bit to the left, shrinking a figure down, stuff like that.
3: Then I lightbox the pencils onto a piece of bristol. I cut up a bunch of 5 1/2 by 4 1/4 sqares from one big sheet. Here's a trick I've learned the hard way: when you pull a piece of bristol out of the pad, put some light pencil X-marks on the back of the bristol sheet before you forget which one is which. Believe it or not, the two sides of the bristol are slightly different!
4: Starting to ink the basic linework with the crowquill, working foreground to background for the most part, and also left to right - being left-handed. I usually have at least two different crowquills going at one time - one a little more broken-in, for the heavier lineweights, and a newer one for the finer details. If there were any word balloons in this panel, I would letter them first.
5: More linework! All those little squiggly marks around the page are "tester" lines, to make sure the nib is behaving itself, and doesn't have any paper fibers caught in the tip. It's a constant battle.
6: The finished linework.
7: Crosshatching! I've also gone in with a crappy little brush and filled in some of the areas I want to be pure black. I usually keep a bottle of "filling-in" ink, into which I pour the concentrated dregs of my regular ink bottles.
8: More crosshatching! I blame Gerhard.
9: The inks are all done! The main characters on the gangplank are looking a little lost in all the detail at this point, so I'm going to go in and make a little "halo" around them with white-out next. I'll also put a little bit of a halo around the banner, to push it into the foreground a little more.
10: Pencils erased, white-out applied! I try not to do any white-out stuff until after the pencils are completely erased, or the pencil smudges up the white-out and it gets all gray and crummy looking. So the panel is pretty much done at this point.
11: Then I scan the panel into Photoshop and play with the contract and levels until it looks sort of similar to the original art. Keeping the fine lines from disappearing while also keeping the crosshatching from turning into mud can be almost impossible! With Set to Sea, I've been trying to avoid making any corrections to the final art in the computer, out of some weird Olde-Timey compulsion. Except for the occasional speck of dirt or what-not, what you see is how the original art looks.




1. .05 mechanical pencil. This one is a "Zebra M-301." I dunno, but it was pretty cheap at OfficeMax, and I prefer mechanical pencils with the little metal tips. Lets you see what you're doing better.
2. Hunt 102 crowquill pens. Like I said, I usually have two going at one time. I put some blue tape around the handle of one so I don't get them confused.
3. Koh-I-Noor rapidographs. I use the "brown" one for lettering, and the "gray" one for detaily stuff.
4. Mars plastic eraser. It works pretty good.
5. Higgins "Black Magic" ink. Not great, but okay. You can get blacker inks that hold up better to erasing, but they tend to get too thick and goopy to work well with crowquill. But I'm always looking!
6. FW Acrylic White. I've only ever found a really good white-out once - it was called Pen-Opake - and they stopped making it years ago. This stuff is made by the same company, but is only so-so, tending to "crackle" when applied too thick. Oh well.
7. French curve. They often sell these in sets of four different varieties, but this is the only curve in the set I find very useful, for inking long, smooth curves. I think you can buy them individually, though.
8. A bit of paper towel, for cleaning your pen tip. You will do this often.
9. A big jar of clean water, for brushes, etc.
10. Eraser shield. This is surprisingly useful for erasing little bits of penciling gone wrong, without ruining everything around it.
11. Rapidograph ink. Only use the official rapidograph ink - you can get away with regular ink for a while, but it'll eventually clog the works. So will the official ink, but much less often.
12. Mechanical pencil lead. I like the HB kind. Not too scritchy, not too smeary.
13. Magic Rub eraser. Also good.
14. My "fill-ins" bottle of ink, for large areas of black. When my regular ink is amost empty, I pour the dregs in here. It's marked with a piece of tape.
15. Extra nibs. I go through 'em pretty fast, good to have plenty on hand. They come in boxes of 12.
16. Coffee. A valuable tool in the cartoonists arsenal. Feel free to replace this with a beer after 11pm or so.
17. A cheap hand-mirror. You can spot a lot of mistakes in your drawings that you wouldn't normally catch, if you look at it in a mirror.
18. I bought these little portfolio things with clear plastic sleeves at the art supply store for about $5 each. That way I can keep all of the panels in order for quick reference.
19. Reference pictures that I printed out. Google image search is your friend.
20. A nice, bright, swing-arm desk lamp.
21. This is a little kitchen timer I got at Target. I try to time how long I spend drawing, to keep a realistic idea of how much work I'm getting done each day. Eleanor and I have monthly contests!
22. Harvey, the cat. If you don't keep a nearby pillow, they'll try to sleep right where you're drawing.

Set to Sea 82


The story so far...


I'm working on a little "supplemental material" thing - I'll put it up in a day or two!

Set to Sea 81


The story so far...


They're doing some drankin'!

I hope you had a tolerable Valentime's. We made hand-done cards for each other as has been our tradition for four years running. You will never see these cards, as they are far too embarrassing.

We have been reading Larry Gonick's Cartoon History of the World series. You should check them out, especially if your grip on world history is as hazy as ours.

This Of Montreal song is set about three blocks from our house.

I'm about to try making a Kolsch!

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Set to Sea 80


The story so far...


Oy vey, the hatching went a little wild in this one. Also, it looks pretty crappy on the screen.

You now have 144 days to finish your Fluke Anthology submission and send it to me! That deadline would be 7/7/07. The actual festival is on April 7th, so don't forget about that either.

I got my identity thefted the other day! An overdraft notice showed up in the mail for almost $800 worth of ATM withdrawals in what looks like Italy (Colli Di Baccanello? Gaverina?) accompanied with overdraft charges and international processing fees. Luckily it was an old account I don't use very often or keep any money in. Also lucky that the Wachovia people seem pretty ready to believe that I didn't travel to Rome on short notice just to use the ATM.

We bottled the beer yesterday! We tried tasting some - it was flat, but unmistakably beer! Two more weeks, and we can actually drink the stuff for reals.

FLUKE ANTHOLOGY!



Hey! Are you psyched for FLUKE 2007! What is FLUKE, you ask? Why, it's Athens, Georgia's premiere minicomic and zine festival! It takes place in a bar! And it's happening on April 7th!

Are you psyched about the FLUKE 2007 Anthology? What's the FLUKE Anthology? It's an annual mini-comics anthology, and the Official Publication of FLUKE! Kazimir Strzepek's first Mourning Star comic and Johnny Ryan's first Comic Book Holocaust strip both saw their debut in these hallowed pages - and now it's your turn.

Okay, hyperbole over. Since a solid majority of the FLUKE Council of Elders have come down with serious cases of baby-itis, I'm stepping up to the plate and assuming responsibility for this issue! We've only got about two months to go till the actual festival, so I'm thinking it's not very realistic to get the book out for the con itself. Let's aim for mid-summer. So here it is!

FLUKE 2007 Anthology

Deadline: July 7, 2007

Format:
1-5 pages. The final book is going to be standard minicomics size: 5 1/2 inches wide, 8 1/2 inches tall - so size accordingly.

How to send the pages digitally, in order of preference:
First, make sure they're at least 600 dpi bitmaps or 300dpi grayscales. Put the page number in the file name. Then:
1.) Upload them to your own personal webspace just like any file, and send me the link at: drew (the at symbol) drewweing (dot) com.
2.) Or... send them to the above email address via yousendit.com, rapidshare.de, megaupload.com, or one of the other file sharing services.
3.) Or... Email them as attachments to the above email address. Please make sure your attachment is 5mb or less per email.

How to send the pages in "the mail":
1.) Make a nice crisp black & white copy or printout of each page. Be sure they're numbered in some way. Mail them flat, with some cardboard or something to keep them from getting bent up by vengeful postal workers. Please don't send your originals! The address:

Drew Weing
PO Box 1926
Athens, GA 30603-1926


The Rewards: You get a free copy of the book! And the undying praise of a grateful nation.

Set to Sea 79


The story so far...


Lots of stuff happened since the last time I posted!

Our post-SCAD, newly-Seattleite friend Max Clotfelter stopped by for a day last week, and we had a pretty pleasant time showing him around our mundane little stomping grounds. His website is down right now or I'd link to it... I guess I'll just link to this USS Catastrophe page. We missed seeing his gf Kelly though... maybe next time?

I made some beer! Or at least I'm hoping it'll be beer. It'll be a couple weeks before we really know. Right now it's just a mystery liquid in a big plastic bucket. There's a little water-filled airlock device on top of the bucket, and I had a good time watching it bubble for a couple of days. It's very hard not to think about making up labels and packaging. This is known as "putting the cart before the horse." Weing's Signature, Undrinkably Foul, Bacteria-Infested, Pale Ale.

I went to a comic convention yesterday! Robert, Patrick and I all crammed into a pickup truck and tooled up to the Atlanta Comic Convention. This involves a big room full of middle-aged men and stacks of long boxes. It took me back to my youth - a callow lad with a pocket full of allowance money and a well-thumbed-through copy of Wizard, pawing thru the boxes in search of whatever book was going to be the "hot score" for that month. Bloodshot #6 with first appearance of Ninjak! Sweet! Brigade #2 with intact coupon? Lemme at it! X-O Manowar #15 with variant pink logo? This is going to be worth some real money some day! Anyway, I walked out with a little stack of graphic novels & manga from one of those "all graphic novels 50% off!" tables.

On the ride back, we talked a little bit about Fluke 2007. I'm going to be taking over the '07 Fluke Anthology! But I'll put that into its own post shortly.

Eleanor's knees are killing her! We think she has "runner's knee," which is essentially a misalignment of the kneecap. It's been bothering her a little bit ever since she took a bad fall while we were jogging about a year ago. But it's been really flaring up recently, leading to a lot of her sitting around, legs propped up, ordering me to bring her drinks, pick up her dropped pencils, and fetch her knick-knacks. More than usual, I mean.

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