Coloring Oz – Dorothy 2


Some folks have a weird idea that boys won’t read stories that feature girls as heroes. I suspect that the boys who have that problem were already indoctrinated with that thought by their parents before they’d learned to read. One of my early role models was a little girl from Kansas who, when dropped in a foreign land, didn’t cry or fuss she just picked herself up and set off for home. Not because she missed it really. Dorothy Gale wanted to get home so that her Aunt and Uncle wouldn’t worry about her. She slapped a lion, made some good friends, killed a couple of witches and overthrew a wizard. All before her eighth birthday.

She went back four more times before finally bringing Aunt Em and Uncle Henry with her and settling down in Oz on the fifth excursion. She wasn’t anything special. She wasn’t an outcast or a weirdo or a extraordinarily talented. She wasn’t a chosen one. There were no prophecies of her coming. She was just determined, smart, practical and knew how to look out for her friends.

Coloring Oz – Dorothy 1


I hope you’re fond of Oz, or at least Oz Squad, because I’m going to be spending the next few (many) days posting the series of mini-illustrations I’m doing for this project. And I’ll admit right now that I’m spacing out the stages of the illustration process into daily updates because, at the moment, I’m still working on the art. If I manage to get far enough ahead of the game I’ll post the process as a single update instead of doing it over the course of days.

Right now I’ll be keeping to one step per post per day. Today’s post is, like the Scarecrow’s series, a bit farther along than it would have been if I’d been thinking ahead. The art here has already had the main inking done.

Coloring Oz – Scarecrow 3


The next step after finishing the art on paper is to scan it into Photoshop and start coloring. I lay down color under the scan of the illustration. To begin with I just lay down flat areas of color without any shading or tones. Without the illustration layer the color looks like this:

Coloring Oz – Scarecrow 1


2010 was a crap year for getting work done on Oz Squad. It was a crap year for getting much art done period but the Squad suffered the most. This sketch is one of the threads I’m finally picking up after far too long. It’s a piece of a project that Steve handed me last year and I dropped after getting just a tenth of the way into it.

My hope is that 2011 will be the year I finally finish the outstanding Squad projects and get new ones moving. I also hope that the earth doesn’t get hit by an asteroid and that all bad men come to bad ends.

Anyway.

I meant to scan this piece in the sketch stage but forgot so we’ll get started here with the inks. This is the Scarecrow, the first companion that Dorothy picked up on her journey to see the Wizard. He’s been through a lot of hard times since Dorothy pulled him down from his pole. He’s been through a lot of good times as well. He hasn’t forgotten either.

Siblings Eight


My family is one of those blended concoctions – a mix of steps, halves and full blooded siblings with about 20 years difference between the oldest and the youngest. While we did get together for various holidays over the years we never managed to get more than 6 of us in the same room together. At this point, in this world, we never will get more than six of us together.

One of the handy things about being an artist is that you can create your own worlds whenever you feel like it. So for my Big Sister’s birthday this year I gave her this picture of a full sibling get together.

And before you ask, I have no idea why Big Big Brother is wearing moose antlers or why there’s a green mammoth in the background. Just because I create new worlds doesn’t mean I understand them.