Strip Girl


Back in 1998, we, the members of the Labor of Love Artist’s Collective who were active at the time, were trying to figure out creative ways to make some money. The first version of Glyph, the magazine, had collapsed. LoL was taking in graphic design jobs but most of us were more interested in doing comics than in doing more graphic design.

(Word of warning – it’s not a great idea to run a creative business – in our case, graphic design – that you don’t have a lot in interest in to pay for another business – publishing comics – that you have a lot interest in. It’s not that we did bad work for our design customers. We didn’t. We put our all into it. It’s just that there wasn’t a lot of satisfaction in the design work for those of us who didn’t aspire to be designers. Once Labor of Love quit publishing and moved to straight design those who were interested in design really flourished.)

One of the writers proposed that he and I put together some comic strip samples and see if we could sell a strip to the syndicates. If we didn’t sell the strip we could always publish it ourselves somewhere.

I’ve always admired good humor comic strip writing. I don’t think well in three or four panel gags. The writer was pretty good at it. His idea for the strip was nothing really innovative – Put Upon Dad, Screwy Mother, Crazy Kid and Goofy Pet – but he knew how to pace a joke and he was fun to work with. I’m looking for the strip samples I drew but in the meantime I’ve got some character samples to show.

This is the Crazy Kid. She was somewhat calvinesque in her character, living more in her imagination than reality. I’m sure we must have named the characters but, at the moment, I can’t remember what those names were.

First Salehs Sketch


Ah, April 1st. That day when people make up elaborate lies so they can shout April Fools when others are taken in by them. I won’t be doing that. If I didn’t need to schedule this post I wouldn’t even remember the date. It’s not that I have a problem with an international day of lying (it would nice if we could keep our most egregious lies restricted to a single day) it’s mainly that I don’t remember holidays in general. I remember Christmas and New Years. Christmas because I have to plan ahead. New Years because it’s so soon after Christmas.

And what does that little rant have to do with the above sketch? Not a darned thing.

Color by Swenson 4


This is the last of the art samples (that I’ve found anyway) from 1998 with Jeff Swenson digitally painting over my pencils. I don’t think that this was one of the pages of the comic. I think we did this one just to see what it would like to have him paint over my pencils. It’s … interesting. It’s always weird for me to have someone ink or color my work. Not bad. Just a little weird. I can digitally color my own work now but in 1998 I barely understood what Photoshop did, let alone Painter. And even if I did Jeff could paint far faster than me. Hell, he could probably paint faster then than I can now.

Color by Swenson 2


Another example from 1998 of Jeff Swenson’s digital painting over my pencils. I don’t remember how many pages of samples we did. Probably 3. It was a brief vignette featuring some sort of detective investigating an old house in the sticks. I believe I drew the pages as regular comics and then Jeff created individual paintings of each panel and then put them back together as a page. If so, I don’t have the final digital pages. The samples I’m showing are scans of printouts that I had in my files.

Color by Swenson 1


The details of this are pretty fuzzy. Fuzzier than normal anyway. If I remember correctly, in 1998 or 1999 Nizzibet was contacted by someone she knew in comics who was looking for artists to work on some sort of color horror comic. She suggested that Jeff Swensen and I put together some samples. I did the penciled art and he digitally colored/painted it. This was long before I knew my way around Photoshop.

Storyboard 3


And here is the last of the panels that I’ve found for that Comcast commercial.

(If you came by yesterday you’ve already seen this and need to scroll down for the earlier panels. I originally posted them out of order. Not that it matters much.)