Comments Off | Posted: September 22nd, 2009 | Filed under: Design Fetish | Tags: design, twitter
Smashing Magazine has an interesting article on how to make the best possible Twitter background for your profile. I went for something as minimal as possible with my own, but some of the examples featured really impressed me.
Comments Off | Posted: September 22nd, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion | Tags: the loneliest astronauts
I’m starting a new weekly “humor” strip with Ming Doyle next week, and you can go look at the site and add it to your readers now!
Comments Off | Posted: September 21st, 2009 | Filed under: Design Fetish
With a surgical precision that makes you assume it’s digital, Takamatsu’s
use of gouache is just sublime as all hell. I’d love to see these in person.
1 Comment | Posted: September 21st, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion

After the party, it’s the
after party!
Comments Off | Posted: September 18th, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion

We meet the victim. it isn’t pretty. It could be considered NSFW even if there’s no nudity.
3 Comments | Posted: September 17th, 2009 | Filed under: What I've Been Reading | Tags: agents of atlas, avengers, batman, busiek, jeff parker, morrison, pluto, urasawa, yotsuba
OK, here’s what I’ve been reading, with extremely brief notes.
1.
The new edition of Avengers Forever is a beautiful thing with larger trimsize giving Carlos Pacheco’s artwork the room it needs to really hit you. There’s a lot of cute throwaway details, but unless you’re a massive fan of The Avengers and excited about Kurt Busiek’s sometimes-too-neat superhero storytelling being wrapped around a near-incoherent plot involving time travel, Kang vs Immortus (who is also Kang) and something called the destiny force, I don’t actually recommend it.
2.
The praise I’d heard for Pluto: Urasawa x Tezuka is very justified. While the quick-and-dirty pitch is “Watchmen for Astro Boy,” Urasawa’s storytelling (which has grown by leaps since Monster, another series I’m catching up on) is nuanced and willing to let the reader work a bit and the emotional beats he hits are a bit stunning, especially considering how much of this work revolves around robots.
3.
Yotsuba&! #6 is likely the comic I’ve looked forward to the most this year, and yes, I know how creepy that makes me sound. Still, despite my inherent cynicism, there’s something so refreshingly irony-free about observing life with Yotsuba and I can’t help but get sucked in and laughing and worrying and cheering for her. It’s a bit like the Wachowskis’ Speed Racer that way — kid-friendly material that works on every level because it’s not aiming at anyone in particular.
4.
Boy, Philip Tan is not the artist I would have followed Frank Quitely with on Morrison’s Batman and Robin fourth issue. He certainly makes some game attempts to match Morrison’s scripting, but they come off as forced versus the effortless way that Quitely packs creatively-laid-out panels with detail and still manages to be readable. There’s a scene where a card is falling from the air and the camera tracks it into Batman’s hands and it lacked a certain kind of alchemy that Morrison manages to do with his best collaborators.
All of this aside, I absolutely love how these comics are scripted and how they play with conventions like titles and credits. It’s sort of the less-formalized version of All Star Superman and it makes each chapter’s inertia play out a certain way.
5.
I’m just going to presume Jeff Parker writes Agents Of Atlas for me and Chris Sims and the rest of you are lucky enough to be along for the ride. The latest issue has a terrific gag centering around a personality implant for M11 just identified as “The Greatest.” I won’t spoil it, but I’ll say it’s a perfect example of how to slip neat asides into your superhero comics without getting bogged down in the too-cute-oh-hey-here’s-a-meme syndrome that some writers fall into.
6.
You’re reading my new comic, right? OK, good.
Comments Off | Posted: September 17th, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion | Tags: she died in terrebonne

Sheriff Gartner follows up on that radio call.
1 Comment | Posted: September 16th, 2009 | Filed under: Design Fetish | Tags: dalian shide stadium, nbbj

I love the idea of a stadium that’s open ended and is designed for more than just whatever game-in-a-rectangle, and NBBJ’s gorgeous design has a very human feel that’s not found in most of the sports megacomplexes that dot the globe.
Comments Off | Posted: September 16th, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion | Tags: she died in terre

This time around, you’re gonna meet the guy from the filling station. How’s he fit into all this? You’ll find out.
Again: thanks to everyone who’s retweeted, linked, and mentioned this project. We really appreciate it and TJ and I urge you to keep it up because we want to be webcomics superstars like that guy who draws the strip about the misanthropic assholes and the woman who tolerates them for some reason.
1 Comment | Posted: September 16th, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion | Tags: the rack

So, why’s Cliff just stumbling into weddings and
demanding they be put on hold?
1 Comment | Posted: September 15th, 2009 | Filed under: Design Fetish
You can customize Case-Mate’s new $1 iPhone case with a Sharpie, if you so desire. It’s also recyclable, unlike that weird pleather thing that your office gave you.
2 Comments | Posted: September 15th, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion | Tags: she died in terrebonne

Who’s introduced in the second prelude? We don’t tell you his name, but you will get to know him a lot better.
As an aside: I want to thank everyone for the support and ask them to keep it up. This project’s very different from what I’ve done before and it’s going to be a bit more experimental in places. I’d promise the trip will be worth it, but I hate it when writers do that. So, I’ll just ask for your patience. Thanks again!
Comments Off | Posted: September 15th, 2009 | Filed under: Shameless Self-Promotion | Tags: the rack

Here we are, face to face, a series of
fictional comic book shop staff picks.
Comments Off | Posted: September 14th, 2009 | Filed under: Design Fetish | Tags: new york
Life has a fantastic gallery of photos of New York in the 1940s, some iconic, some just fantastic slice-of-life imagery.