Showing posts with label D'n'A. Show all posts
Showing posts with label D'n'A. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

How Do I Start Making Comics? One Great Story at a Time


We are going to dip into the mailbag, or in this century, our messages, for this one from J. Wagner in Rome, GA.

Do you make comic books for a living? My daughter wants to and she is a really talented artist. Any advice?


Sure! Work with me! lol They are part of my living. I am going to make more money in the short term from paintings, but meanwhile I'm drawing the comic I hope will break us out in a big way. (That's Integr8d Soul Comics Number One, for those of you who are late to the party!)

I've drawn quite a few and had a small sell-out run of my 2011 comic D'n'A: The Mountain, which, like everything from California days, I need to get back into print. (I just want to do it with its sequel, because getting on bookshelves via Diamond is like murder if you're not a Trade Paperback.)

But I could go on and on. Is her passion Manga comics, btw? What are some of her favorite titles? My advice will vary a wee bit depending on her heart's desire, which she'll need to tap to not only conceive projects, but complete as many as humanly possible, too.

I will start with this: however great your characters, however much you love them, remember you need One Great Story. People have to start somewhere, so think up the life of a given character for a while and see what part of that life seems like a compelling place to tell just one complete and not-too-ungodly-long tale that leaves anyone hungry for more. It will mean so much to her if she gets positive reception for one single complete effort, even if she envisions years of epics embodied in her cast. When you really care about telling that one story, you work through any problems along the way and enjoy bringing a full piece of your vision to life, in a form people can now share.

Just get together an interesting conflict that unveils the inner character in some insight, with a beginning, middle, and end.

Bring something to a conclusion and you will trust yourself more. You will have a template then which you can repeat the rest of your artistic life, throwing in all the new challenges you take up along the way, telling new insights you get about people and making characters that get hung up in people's minds.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Progress on D'n'A: Looking For a Sign (and a word from our sponsors)

First: a very faithful Big Star cover (voice and all). Come check us out Thursdays at 7pm on Ustream.tv, and Stage It.com has much higher fidelity and better chat function, so watch for Integr8d Soul there! We play Sunday and Monday.


Myebook - D'n'A  Comics #1 - click here to open my ebook First: DNA Comics #1 is ONLINE!!!


You can get D'N'A: The Mountain, plus one each of our two promotional t-shirt designs, for just $23.00 plus shipping and handling. Just write us here or at mkthemurl@gmail.com or hit us up through our Facebook Badge on this page. Tell us the size and address; we can take payments by check, money order, or PayPal online, so let us know your preference---and thanks so much!

Our new ideas for D'n'A: Looking For A Sign have given the story a more dramatic tone in keeping with D'n'A: The Mountain's intimate friendships, and Southern Gothic menace. With Amanda's little devil's arc clear to us now, she apparently sifts through numerous confusing states of existence, believing her frenemy the angel's dead and his human charge apparently out of touch with her own motivations. The rest of the story happens in the "real" world, following Dee Cee and Amanda into new phases of their lives in the aftermath of their shocking encounter with...but pick up D'n'A: The Mountain, or download it through MyEbooks! The story's clearly drawn, told with expression and details all too real.

I really hope we can make it available this year; keep your fingers crossed, and let me know what you think of D'n'A: The Mountain!!! The creation process isn't complete without you. Where the story goes for you, what you take with it, is of great interest to all three of us here at Integr8d Soul.





Note the Zombie Baby; he really had a nice fake red gash as he watched the Zombie Walk from his pram...




AND!! You can use the button provided; the $15 will cover your postage.






D'n'A t-shirt #1




or





D'n'A t-shirt Puzzle pieces (girl and boy)












Thursday, March 17, 2011

This to come



Our first t-shirt is available NOW!!
Want to know the story behind this?


Cool, it features the image
of the cover to D'n'A #2, coming in June!







D'n'A t-shirt #1




or





D'n'A t-shirt Puzzle pieces (girl and boy)













First off, the first shirts ("Puzzle Girl") are here, and the first comics(D'n'A #1!)
were paid for today!!!!!



13 things to look forward to from me, friends:




1. Tonight, I'm drawing commissions for LaKisha and Leslie.

2. Oh, yeh, new business cards (next week!)


3. INTEGR8D SOUL: Our music is already is available for you on YouTube and reverbnation.com. Our first studio recording of "The Key" is my next priority, coming April 1st!

4. STUX: the website, with cartoons, live action clips of relentless silliness.
Coming in May


5. INTEGR8D SOUL LIVE: Webcam shows, open mics, and even street performances. We are about to have fun playing live for everyone.


6.Lose a few pounds!

7. This Spring:

First, as-yet unnamed collection of my prose and articles, perhaps named after my blog, Be Chill, Cease ill, with profits going to help Haiti.
I will include several never-before published stories, including one from ...

8. ...my series of five that will be re-collected on their own, to benefit quake and tsunami victims in Japan. Two dogs, a four month old baby, a seventy year old woman, an eighty year old man, and fifty nuclear power plant workers are my inspiration.

(I'll be busily working on my novel TRANZ, too; I hope to draft it over three months, then re-write and shop by April, 2012.)

9. D'n'A comics (second issue coming in June)

10. The Stux: (first issue in June!)


And later this summer:


11. Not Another Comic Book First issue, August. First limited edition batch: Comic Con, July 24th. I have a colorist in mind for this, already!

And rounding out the year 2011,


12. Portal Immortal First issue, November.


SunStrike, Miracalla

13. Not only musical performances, but comic conventions: sometimes, in the same city! Wouldn't it be cool if you came along?

PLUS: Mysti Hazel's GArden: Some children songs and voices.



When that starts to appear, I really can't say=-could be out before anything else!


But don't worry, you can keep up with it all on INTEGR8DSOUL.COM, where we will open our website next week!!!


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Who is Sheer-Zan?

Next year: the saga of a revolutionary, and the struggle for freedom from a dictator.
But who is this Sheer-Zan, that helps people terrified by military police, the human protector of the wildlife endangered by a cruel war. Stories will appear, but look for the comic book in 2012. Iran, Egypt, Libya, Bahrain, Haiti, Japan---my eye over the world is moving me to explore radical change, and question what it is to live free, and to survive, and to work together, and to face one's fears.




Saturday, December 25, 2010

My love of comic books: in a nutshell



The next-to-complete digital cover to DnA #1: available next week!!!













Best team: Kirby/Lee Fantastic Four *runner –up Gerber/ Buscema / Janson Defenders

Favorite Marvel Cahiracter*: Spider-Man and Heroine: She Hulk





runners-up: 1970’s Valkyrie and Hellcat! (presently digging Wasp in Roger Stern's Avengers, and love Sue and Storm, yes they share a name as observed in X-Men Ann. 5)

Favorite Marvel Story: Hopefully one I still haven’t read yet. For now:
“The End of Spider-Man!” Amazing Spider-Man #18
runner-up: Amazing Spider-Man #248, "The Kid Who Collects Spider-Man

DC Team: The Invisibles

DC Cahiracter: John Constantine runner-up: Superman (honorable mention) Sandman

Heroine: Big Barda

DC Story: Ooo, the last issue of the Dark Knight Returns.

My first answer was the 66 issue run of Preacher runner-up Rock of Ages (JLA)

Favorite Artist: John Romita Jr.

Favorite Writer: 1960s Stan Lee R. Crumb 1970s Steve Gerber

1980s Roger Stern runner-up Chris Claremont (but diving into Frank Miller next!)

1990s Grant Morrison, Garth Ennis, Kurt Busiek

2000s Alan Moore Grant Morrison Ed Brubraker, Matt Fraction

Indie Work: enjoying the Hernandez Brothers and Terry Moore.

David Lapham's Stray Bullets, Arthur Spiegleman's MAUS,

Favorite Humor Books: Groo the Wanderer, Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers



Local Favorites: Jay Allen Sanford, Billy Martinez
Always wanted to try : Cerebus Vol. 2

My Christmas stash this year involves a score of back issues of Power Man and Iron Fist, Morrison's Seven Soldiers book, Moore's Halo Jones, Fantastic Four 240-242, the latest three issues of Amazing Spider-man, and doubtlessly some surprises. But that's what I'll be reading while I'm alone this morning, with some good music on.

This has been a great year of revisiting comics, but while I don't plan to buy many for a while now, I do plan to write and draw about FOUR by Summertime! Two comprise the sequel to the DnA comic; another is the redrawn version of the Stuckwayze Forev-ugh. The color one will be Not Another Comic Book---also redrawn, and replotted for a tight 25 page adventure not quite like any other comic book.



I really stopped buying many comics regularly over the last decade, so there's a lot of stuff like POWERS and CHEW I'd probably give a chance. I got much more introspective here: http://ceaseill.blogspot.com/2010/01/letter-about-dads-and-old-comics.html One day I'll be just in the mood to tell you about the many faces of my old hobby, myself. Art and story together creates a fantastic possibility for collaboration; there's nothing quite like the private world between your hands where the movie you make is YOU filling in the world around those panels. I like the constant switching the brain does, dealing with words and pictures. I often get great ideas on other things and leave my comic lying around open all day unfinished.



I am sure I've forgetting something cool I'd like to tell you, but my mind's both full of a lot of things...and quite empty at the present.


Speaking of the present: Merry Christmas, one and all!!!!


Be Chill Cease ill

*Cahiracter involves an in-joke you either know or don't care about.

Powered by WebRing.





Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Something good will last









So:


Day Four



I’m thinking back to the middle of our vacation on a day where I truly feel reconnected with my surroundings again here in San Diego. The people shouting hello and waving from the balcony of the Embassy Suites are worth a snap, a picture to remind me of them waving to the street, and us waving back.


Waves, back and forth. Without any forethought, our walk took us to the water, where the bay has receded. The massive battleship passes us in the sun. The purple ray heals; its purpleness shines up and down the frame of the video I take, which passes over the ship bearing waters, over the distant kite in South Marina Park, and then back again over the Embarcadero, where I find Angela with me on our last---most recent---walk.

Our first walk together ever was the subject that dominated me on day four of vacation: there seemed no better time to snap pictures of what’s left, anyway, of the place where she and I first went for a walk. We’ve wanted to remember it for so many reasons, as it was the first private instance of our friendship, which is what all the walks worth taking are really about: friends with yourself, friends with others, miles you walk for yourself and others. We discussed so many things: on the walk today, we talked about how one cannot judge oneself in a way, for the totality of all the elements of the positive and negative repercussions of our lives is not usually visible. The facts are not all on hand. The complete trial can never render a verdict! Soon, the subject becomes where to shoot the first picture outside of Angela’s new boots, and the lack of beauty before one crosses from the intersection of Harbor Dr. and Pacific Hwy., and then we are walking into a quieter, off-season Seaport Village.


I’d started the day reading a book, swapped for a note left in the dining room, which Angela is looking right now, as I have yet to enlist her actively in this writing.

It’s called Little Essays Toward Truth. I enjoyed the discussion of topics such as Man, Memory, Sorrow and Wonder, with the vigorous voice of Aleister Crowley. The poetry in some specific terms reconciles with specific conditions, ceremonies and offices, and the writing in between is in a tone that is unapologetically intellectual. AT first I find the fluid construction of high vocabulary a bit comical, but I understand as she reads it that Crowley intends to take us out of the ordinary frame of thinking, and so, presents a stratus that hovers observantly above the ordinary life it suggests be lived in a non-ordinary way.


Make no mistake, a deep scholarship of Kabbalah is implicit in these observations, coming from one who has intuited a few experiences very deep to me. If Crowley himself, who had many people who cared about him and may have feared for him in some of his mysterious research and exploration, was occasionally reckless or reflective still of some chauvinism born of his admiration for his father and defensive recoil from his difficult mother, he was not without worthwhile opinions.


My own mother is very glad to have us down; she doesn’t smother me, but she appreciates my contact and opinions and time and, in some form, my goals. So it was that we squeezed together a photoshoot, tracking Angela and I from the place I had my first silly mistake in front of her to the nearby alleyway, Opera Alley, where we shared our first kiss. Many drawings will be born of this effort; I see particular pages, and they are moving from dream to reality ---as reality of drawings, of fictional people, who have something to learn from what I was taught by experience.


So we go: from Broad Street, we walked over to the restaurant parking lot where I drove Debra’s borrowed---but that’s another story. Mom, having a bit of trouble walking still, decides to take a rest on this hot day on a bench near the corner of 2nd Ave. and Broad St. Meanwhile, we take pictures to help us envision a background that, frankly, is no longer in the same form---but at least we can get perspective, distances, spaces in which to look for inspiration for our drawings. Next we go around the restaurant, now abandoned, after so very many identities. It’s hard to shoot much with which to recreate the place, but it was useful to the memories. We find a walkway we would’ve loved to have during that time, now running beneath the bridge beside the restaurant.

So we go: across the bridge, lined with many lights, passing over the Oostanaula River, recalling the piggy-back ride I gave her on the way down the same bank, which now has steps. Hmm! Someone’s commemorated our walk, our retreat, our...hmm, our private space; it’s now a decent place to take a date even when the sun’s out! But the sun was NOT out the night we crossed that bridge. I just wanted to cheer her up, and I was full of confidence and at least enough love for myself to grant myself an adventure, which was all but kicked off, and what I was waiting for at the time, I don’t know, because I could’ve bought my bus ticket to Colorado anytime, with my bills turned over to my future bro-in-law and sis, in our old apartment, and my two weeks’ notice at Red Lobster complete.

Now I was 21, and while I didn’t think too much of what I’d accomplished in my life just yet, I was less interested in judging and more interested in living a certain way, where I heard music along the paths, where I could be alone and not lonely, and see the things and hear the things and treasure the things that would become my art, my songs. I didn’t believe I could draw at the time, and now more years than I care to tell later, I’m drawing this walk, this one act of kindness, which got the better of me, in some ways, seeing as how that walk continues to this day.


So we go: to the gazebo where we met the man with one eye, relaxing on its seat and enjoying a drink, for which I contributed a dollar for the next round after hearing his story and his question: “so are you two married?”

“Not yet!” we both said. Hahahahahah!!!!

So we go: wait, there’s a woman there reading this time, and she found out what we are out there doing, and enjoyed the thought very much! It’s nice to spread a bit of romance. It can happen to you!


So we go: Mom’s only going to stay cozy on that bench but so long, and I call her quickly to let her know we’re on the bridge back. We figure the bridge the first time had to be Fifth Avenue, so we’d come positioned to take Opera Alley back over to her workplace, where sister Dixie closes the kitchen, and if it takes forever, it’s either because they’re having a drink and having a good time, or there is indeed something about that night that will last forever.

Looking up, I wonder if there’s some sign some way to tell me should I kiss this girl.


Soon I have her looking up, too, for a literal sign. I will never forget our first kiss.


India ink at Michael’s, groceries and commentary on the local looks at Kroger’s, “and don’t forget the sweet drink at Starbuck’s in ...whatever...” Yes, Barnes & Noble, where we agreed outside with some fellow, it’s plenty hot enough. All nice---all filled with talk of our friends and family and really, it’s pretty good to be with Mom while she buys a bit of salad and some carrots to help tide us over while we’re at her house, not to mention the haircut she got me, which I went to while the ladies took the groceries on, where I got a chance to relate to Mom’s hairdresser friend my story above, and of my comic, and a bit about herself came with the clip, too. Just what I needed for fresh, clean growth.





Friday, September 10, 2010

Using my new cartooning ink set




I've included original Marc Kane pencils along with my experiment in embellishing with ink, for D'n'A #2.



I have added finishes to the pages of D'n'A #1.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

D'n'A get it covered





I'm about to invert the colors on some of these pictures...the tinting...and then, I'm going to scan it. Then we brush the water soluble pencils with a bit of moisture.


Here's something that I'd like to do as an in-house ad, like, in the back of STuckWayze:
[IMG]http://i34.tinypic.com/2na4qj8.jpg[/IMG]







I will step back, look at this, get a feel for where we are. The scan goes into the e-mail of our inker. The inker's embellishments will prepare the pencils for print.









Here is one treatment of my various elements; the colors aren't all tightly confined to the figures and objects or even the flames. It's meant to embody an internal state (yeah, I'll go with that!), a feeling.

Now, the shadows are positioned to represent a glow around the spherical element, so it lights and shades objects outside it and above it as though it is lit from within. (I started with photographs, taken with a lamp focused on fire spewing from the board at the bottom, to wash it out but to give it more luminescence. The top would then have deeper shadows, though the light can't fall on the objects as though they are three dimensional. The challenge of shadowing objects as raised and blocking light will continue through other pieces.

The drawing is actually a fairly traditional representation of its classically presented subjects. The Photoshop experiments reflect the amusement park like ride's sickening sense of motion unleashed. I used paint to outline the figure and light the eyes. I should see if I can take those base colors and diffuse them to create a less opaque glow ambient to the source (i.e. the eyes).