Showing posts with label Portfolio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portfolio. Show all posts

Coffee-Stain Guy and A Hard-Boiled Egg

"Coffee-Stain Guy and A Hard-Boiled Egg"
An Almost-Random Selection of Doodley-Sketches

Sketches-2011026Sketches-2011025 Totally Hard-BoiledSquid and friends and enemies

SpongeBob Comics #1 Cover Art

It’s finally here! Today is the release date for the very first issue of SpongeBob Comics! I’m very proud to say that I drew and painted the cover art for this baby!
SpongeBob Giant Bongo Comics comic book Cover chasing citizens of Bikini Bottom
Here is the original pencil version…SpongeBob Giant Bongo Comics comic book Cover chasing citizens of Bikini Bottom  pencil version Here’s the inked version below:
SpongeBob Giant Bongo Comics comic book Cover chasing citizens of Bikini Bottom Inked in Adobe Illustrator …and finally the fully-painted artwork below. Completely logo-free,
but still with the crop marks and bleed lines and all that jazz.
SpongeBob Giant Bongo Comics comic book Cover chasing citizens of Bikini Bottom Full color ArtRage painted version
In the next few days I’m also gonna be posting the TON of rejected preliminary drawings from this project. There’s a lot of drawings that I really like a lot, but for one reason or another they were all passed over for the version you see above. So come back soon and check ‘em out!
Spongebob reading a comic book riding on a jellyfish And meanwhile,
I hope you’ll all go out to your
local comics shop and pick up a copy of
SpongeBob Comics #1


Trick-or-Treat Time for SpongeBob and Patrick - ArtRage Digital Painting Process


SpongeBob ArtRage Pumpkin Halloween Nicelodeon Magazine
(Click on the image above for a bigger version)

Submitted for your Pumpkin-Day viewing is the painting I did for Nickelodeon's Halloween issue of SpongeBob SquarePants Magazine...a special Halloween themed portrait of SpongeBob and Patrick as seen from inside a Jack-o-Lantern pumpkin.

Here are a few thumbnails of the work in progress:

SpongeBob steps painting process Halloween Pumpkin cover Nickelodeon Magazine

SpongeBob Patrick Pumpkin Nickelodeon magazine Halloween pumpkin ArtRage digital art
(Click on the cover above for a bigger version)

...and here's the published version with all the word-balloons, headlines and logos.This was painted digitally using the fantastic (and cheap) graphics program, ArtRage 2.5
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Red Bloop


"Red Bloop" Digital painting
Line art from a sketch in SketchbookPro - Painted with ArtRage 2.6

It was a very productive weekend. Ahhhh.

PS...here's a look at the work-in-progress:


California Raisins Comic Book – My First Professional Job

Here is my first professional cartooning job from back in 1988: The California Raisins in 3-D #5

California-Raisins-Comic001
While I was at the Kubert school, I realized that I liked drawing cartoony comics more than a superhero comics that I grew up liking. It sounds kind of strange, but it was a really big surprise to me.
Around this time, the comics that really excited me were Love and Rockets, Life in Hell, and the Kitchen Sink Press reprint of Harvey Kurtzman's Jungle Book.
Being completely ignorant of the lack of demand for funny comics, I wrote and drew a funny animal comic book story and brought it down to San Diego Comic Con to try to get a job.
California-Raisins-Comic002
A lot of people liked my samples, but most of them told me that there's no market for funny comics. I got a couple of bites from some small independent places like Apple Comics, Slave Labor, and Blackthorne Publishing. I also got some very encouraging words from Dave Stevens, Scott Saavedra, and my old hero, Mike Grell.
I came back home with a positive attitude because I had gotten a few good leads. I went back to life as usual (working at an ice cream store) until one day a package arrived on my front doorstep.
California-Raisins-Comic003
The package was from Blackthorne Publishing, and it contained a script, a contract, and 10 blank comic book pages. The job was a 10 page story for an upcoming issue of California Raisins in 3-D! It would have been nice if they had told me in advance... the deadline was in two weeks!
The first thing I had to do was ask my boss for a week off. Then I spent a couple days making thumbnail sketches and practicing drawing the characters. By the time I was ready to dive in fully, I had 10 days left to pencil and ink a 10 page professional quality story.
It was a pretty intense 10 days -- after all, this was my first job and I wanted to make a great impression. This was my way out of the ice cream store! My big break! California-Raisins-Comic004
After I was finished, there was no way I was going to send that precious cargo through the mail. I drove the story down to the Blackthorne offices in El Cajon California.
California-Raisins-Comic005
It was kind of cool to see the rickety little shop that they had going on there. After I turned in the story, they turned right around and give me another script. I didn't get a check, though... but that's another story. California-Raisins-Comic006Some of my early influences
are showing in these pages: on page 3, dig the Robert Crumb-style street scene.
California-Raisins-Comic007And the robot that answers the door on page 4 is an homage to my hero Harvey Kurtzman and his story "Henry and the Goon Child" from his early days at EC comics.
California-Raisins-Comic008 The comic was published in 3-D, so I'm just showing the black-and-white pages as I drew them.
California-Raisins-Comic009 I realize there's no lettering, but trust me -- the story wouldn't make much more sense if it had words. It was a pretty wonky script, but I wasn't about to complain.
California-Raisins-Comic010
Here's a look at the first page in all of its 3-D glory:California Raisins 3D comic page
California-Raisins-Comic-Book-Cover And here's the hideous cover which I certainly did NOT draw.
I'm happy to say that 22 years later (how in the world is THAT possible?) I can still look back at this comic and not wince.
It was still a few more years before my career really got off the ground, but this was my first taste of working to a professional standard, and on deadline, and getting to see my work in print. There is nothing like it :-)

My First Hey Arnold Comic Story

This is my very first Hey Arnold comic story, which was done for Nickelodeon Magazine back in 1996.

Even from the beginning of my relationship with Nick Mag, I had the opportunity -- and was encouraged -- to experiment with layouts... always trying to come up with an interesting way to tell the story.
Hey Arnold Comic Goldfish First Panel
It was always a huge challenge to try to tell a complete story in two pages, so it was really important to find a way to condense the storytelling. In the first panel, I wanted to establish the setting as well as really set up the emotional empathy between Arnold and the goldfish
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The rest of the first page is pretty standard stuff, but on the second page there are two panels that really stand out in my memory. The first one is a wide shot of the Japanese gardens... I really wanted to contrast this scene of openness and peace with the earlier panels that were crowded and confined.

There's no panel border here, and it helps emphasize the openness…

Hey Arnold Comic Goldfish Japanese Garden
I also like to create a sense of depth wherever possible -- hence the foreground elements and the multilayered background.


The fifth panel on the second page is another one without a panel border. Again, I wanted to emphasize the new-found freedom that the fish has.

Hey Arnold Comic Goldfish Goldfish and Koi

My favorite panel in the whole story is the last one; by showing Arnold and Gerald in the reflection of the pool, I was able to keep the emphasis on the most important story point. The irony of the last panel is that as much as the goldfish wanted to be free, it was totally afraid of its new wide-open surroundings. The clever idea that Arnold comes up with is to leave the goldfish in the bowl, and let the fishbowl float around in the beautiful pond.

Hey Arnold Comic Goldfish downshot reflection

I got to do about a dozen of these comic strips over the three years that I worked on the show. Supervision by Craig Bartlett, story and art by me, coloring by Steve Lowtwait.

Here’s the whole two-pager:
Hey Arnold Comic Goldfish Page 1 Hey Arnold Comic Goldfish Page 2

Giant SpongeBob Wall Painting

Here's a 12-foot tall wall painting I designed for Nickelodeon Studios back in 2005
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This is the original Inked art (I didn't work in color back then)
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Here’s an earlier version
which was considered too busy:
SpongeBob Mural not final art Sherm Cohen …I guess it WAS a little too busy.
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...and here's Sherm proudly mugging for the camera!
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More storyboarding tutorials coming soon!

Mighty-B_The-Storyboard062

The Start of Storyboard Week

Storyboard drawing from The Mighty B
Here’s a storyboard sequence I drew
for the “Apprentice” episode from
the first season of The Mighty B!
Mighty B Storyboard Panel Bessie Higgenbottom Since it can be a hassle to open up all these individual pages, I also made them into a sweet slideshow player that you can view full-screen.

Here’s that groovy slideshow player, but…

…This dinky player isn’t big enough to see the storyboards clearly. If you click on the button in the lower right hand corner of the slideshow, it will open up a full-screen window that displays the pages nice and BIG!

(note the Play/Pause button and directional arrows at the bottom of the player…those’ll help you go thru them at your own pace)

The full-sized pages are also linked below if you want to peruse them at your leisure ^_^
Mighty-B_Storyboard001 Mighty-B_Storyboard002 Mighty-B_Storyboard003 Mighty-B_Storyboard004 Mighty-B_Storyboard005 Mighty-B_Storyboard006
In this episode, Mary-Frances (Portia’s mom) is under pressure to sell tons of her “Mary Kay” type of cosmetics. She decides to put her daughter’s scout troop to work for her so she can make her sales quota. Bessie is so into it that Mary-Frances decides to take her on as an Apprentice!

Mighty-B_Storyboard007 Mighty-B_Storyboard008 Mighty-B_Storyboard009 Mighty-B_Storyboard010 Mighty-B_Storyboard011 Mighty-B_Storyboard012

Over the course of this week I’ll be using this storyboard sequence to talk about some of the key concepts about solid storyboarding.

Mighty-B_Storyboard013 Mighty-B_Storyboard014 Mighty-B_Storyboard015 Mighty-B_Storyboard016 Mighty-B_Storyboard017 Mighty-B_Storyboard018
Since I’m not starting the“commentary” on these storyboards until next time, please post any questions you may have in the comments below -- any question on the topic of storyboarding is welcome...that will help me make the rest of this week’s posts as informative as possible.

Mighty-B_Storyboard019 Mighty-B_Storyboard020 Mighty-B_Storyboard021 Mighty-B_Storyboard022 Mighty-B_Storyboard023 Mighty-B_Storyboard024 Mighty-B_Storyboard025 Mighty-B_Storyboard026 Mighty-B_Storyboard027  Mighty-B_Storyboard029
Coming up next: Storyboarding commentary begins with: