Skook WIP #8

Welcome to the eighth issue of the Skook Works in Progress newsletter. Thank you for reading! Or at least looking at the pictures.

Greeting Card Conversions

As usual, we’ll look at a few before (ink and marker/colored pencil drawing) and after (Photoshop edited) greeting card designs. The final versions are all available in my Zazzle store.

Out of the Depths

The Creature from the Black Lagoon is my favorite of the Universal Monsters. Hanging out in the sea with fish seems like a cool way to live. I’m pretty sure I saw Revenge of the Creature before I saw the original movie. Of course I did a cartoon bunny version of the character!

All the Creature wanted was companionship. It was the last of its kind. Sure, it killed a few people but a lot of those people had it coming. If they’d left it alone it wouldn’t have gotten so aggro.

Hmmm. Companionship. Solitude. The eternal conflict of the sensitive soul.

Cuteness and Cuddles

Kermit claims that it’s not easy being green. It seems more likely that it’s just not easy being Kermit. A lot of my favoite things are green.

This critter has no problem being green. She’s got her ragdoll for company and a good set of specs to see the world in all its wonderful detail.

 

A Little Bit Shy

I mentioned last issue that I like dragons but I don’t often draw them because there are already a lot of great depictions of dragons out there. Still, once in a while, a dragon must be drawn. Even shy, self effacing dragons can make demands.

Yes, shy dragon. We see you. You’re a handsome critter. Please don’t set the furniture on fire.

Fox Music

I will not make a joke about a horny fox.
I will not make a joke about a horny fox.
I will not …

Ooops.

Shhhh. Don’t interrupt this solo.

Drink This

Greeting cards are momentary expressions. A mug is a necessity. One of the best surprises of my daily sketch project in 2019 is how many of those sketches were good drawings. And good bases for mug designs. Here are a couple of repurposed illustrations of two Fletcher Hanks’ most famous characters.

Stardust Superwizardry

Stardust is a superwizard. He uses highly advanced technology to punish evildoers.

When need arises he can multiply himself for extra wizardry. And to show off.

Fantomah Will Get You

Fantomah hates you. Fantomah hates just about everyone. Fantomah is not a people person.

If you value your safe human existence you will stay out of Fantomah’s jungles.

Influences – Norman Rockwell

I chose the following three Saturday Evening Post cover illustrations to represent my love of Norman Rockwell’s work because they are great comic strips. It’s fun to imagine that in some alternate world, Rockwell drew a Sunday comic. Or produced graphic novels.

Rockwell was prolific. Over 300 paintings for the Post. Over 4000 published paintings in his lifetime. Book covers. Interior illustrations. Movie posters. I love the detail and expression in his work. Every person depicted is unique. Every object seems to have a history. His images are moments captured, snapshots of an ongoing story.

Every time I look at his work I’m inspired to be a better artist, to pay more attention. To think about the story an illustration is encapsulating.

These Days …

I got lucky. I had a week off from USPS when Seattle got hit with a heavy snowfall. Snow was predicted at the end of that week so we got as many chores and errands out of the way as possible early in the week. We had light rain and clear days. It didn’t seem like snow was acoming.

We went to bed Friday night with a cloudy sky but that’s typical for Seattle. We had canceled plans to have a friend stay overnight because we were worried we wouldn’t be able to give her a ride home in the morning. It looked that might have been too much caution. We woke up with a few inches of snow on the ground and more falling. Between Friday night and Sunday afternoon we got 11 inches. On Sunday evening it started to rain. By Monday afternoon the roads were as safe to drive as they ever are.

Tuesday I went back to work. The mail for my route had not been delivered for three days. Saturday there had been too much snow and only the regulars delivered parts of their own routes. The mail for my route got cased up and left. Sunday was a regular day off. Monday was Presidents’s Day. There were Amazon parcel deliveries both days but I’m guessing they only concentrated what they knew they could get out. I started work at 6 am. I had a tub of unsorted mail left by carriers who didn’t know my route. I did a parcel run before I started sorting my route and I still ended up with a truck overflowing with parcels. (Literally. For the first two hours parcels would fall out of the back of the truck every time I opened the back.) Once it got dark I had to slow down. I put in a 15 hour day. It would have been longer but the night supervisor called me back to the station. I had to bring back two swings worth of mail.

I had spent my week off hanging out with Sarah, doing a lot of art and watching some good series via streaming. (No cable. We haven’t had cable in a decade.) I knew that my route would be a mess. I knew that mail would be heavy. I had gotten some rest. The sun came out and the day was relatively warm. So those 15 hours had some annoying parts but I did enjoy a lot of the day. I feel satisfied making chaos into order and getting mail and parcels to their proper places.

It didn’t hurt that I had Wednesday off. My body hurt but I got a day to recover. I got new tires installed at Costco. I have one of my old tires put in the trunk so I finally have a spare. During the last big snow (in 2018) I had run through a hidden pothole and shredded a tire. I discovered that my car didn’t come equipped with a spare in the trunk. Yes I should have checked sooner but since all my other cars had had them I just assumed that spares were standard. I am clearly not a car guy. Further evidence – my “new” spare is just a tire. It’s not a wheel, ready to just be popped on if needed. I had expected a wheel despite clearly not having an extra rim hanging around. Silly me. But it’s better than the nothing I had before.

My big sister came by with another “Corona Cooler” of her wonderful cooking. Puerto Rican pork ribs and red beans. Gluten free corn muffins. Lentil sausage soup. Gluten free Mexican chocolate upside down banana cake. She often exchanges the new cooler with the previous one after we’ve gone to bed but this time the sun was still up. We got to chat and give each other air hugs.

Thursday was a much shorter, easier day than Tuesday. Rain. Lots of parcels too big to carry in my satchel and therefore requiring extra trips. Still easier and shorter.

And now it’s Friday. Other parts of the country are getting a snowpocalypse that makes our weekend look like a tea party. I’m happy to complain about my week but I know it’s minor compared to the mess in Texas. If you’re in the middle of it I hope you are safe and warm. If you’re somewhere else I hope you’re safe and warm as well. Everyone should be safe and warm.

That’s all I’ve got for this week. See you next Friday!

Skook WIP #7

Welcome to the seventh issue of the Skook Works In Progress newsletter in which I show off some art and write a lot of words. Thank you for joining me. The finished version of each image is available in some form at either my Zazzle or my Redbubble store.

Card Conversions

I’ve spent a few weeks converting scans of hand drawn greeting card illustrations into more print friendly images. The originals were done with primarily with black ink and art markers or colored pencils. The print versions have been been cleaned up and had color added using Photoshop.

Little Red Dragon

I love dragons. I haven’t drawn that many of them because lots of other artists who also love dragons so there are plenty of beautiful pictures of dragons already out in the world. But once in a while it’s fun to add my own depictions to the horde. 

Clearly this is a friendly dragon. It’s the sort of critter that hordes buttons instead of gold. 

Bunny Frankenstein Monster

This fellow is part of my series of classic monsters recast as cartoon bunnies. Because bunnies are terrifying.

I find it amusing that the Universal version of the monster is often depicted as green. He wasn’t intended to be. Charles Pierce, the designer of the creature’s appearance used green make-up because it looked better as grey when filmed in black and white. The original Universal Frankenstein films were all filmed in black and white but color publicitiy photos of the green make-up led the general public to believe that creature was supposed to be green.

An Ice Scream Dream

While I was doing bunny versions of classic monsters it seemed like a good idea to also do bunny versions of modern horror icons.

Three scoops!

Smile!

This critter is one of my favorite drawings. It’s so damned happy.

We all need some happy!

The Beast Within

Sweet and innocent outside. Big jerk inside. Your typical cat.

The original art was done as one of my daily art posts in 2019. I’ve now updated it as a design for a mug. 
Coloring Fluffy

I haven’t managed to do new work for my Redbubble store yet this year. When I do I’ll be sure to make gifs of the process. I’ve now made enough of them I can do it without having to google the process every time. Until I can do (and show off) that new work, here’s a gif of Fluffy putting on his Easter colors. 
Inspirations – Fletcher Hanks

Hmmm. Fletcher Hanks is both inspiration and … anti-inspiration to me. I’d read I Shall Destroy All Civilized Planets, the first collection of his work, a few years ago. That got me sketching versions of Stardust and Fantomah. Since I’ve started to create merchandise featuring the characters I felt compelled to do a reread of the book. I discovered that there’s now a complete collection of his comics – Turn Loose Our Death Rays and Kill Them All. I was tempted to buy the book. I mean, I’d need it for reference, right?

Fortunately my skinflint side prevailed and I checked it out of the library instead.

Paul Karasik is the book’s editor. He loves Hanks’ work. This interview gives a good explanation why. His reasons make sense to me. Hanks was working at a time when the comic book industry and the superhero genre was being invented. He worked solo when comics were mostly being done assembly line. He had a big weird imagination. I admire that. I understand being a fan of something because it’s a weird seminal work.  
Now that I’ve seen all of it I’m also quite happy to not own any of his work. Besides Stardust and Fantomah, Hanks created the characters of Big Red McLane (a lumberjack) and Space Smith/Whirlwind Carter/Buzz Crandall (same guy, same girlfriend, different names – a riff on Buck Rogers/Flash Gordon ) and some one shot characters. 300 plus pages of Hanks is too much Hanks for me. Intellectually I get the raw appeal. He was one of the pioneers of early comic books. He was doing superheroes before the genre had been codified.
Unfortunately decades of comic reading – superhero, underground, manga, bande dessinee, etc – as well as drawing my own comics means that I have a hard time appreciating his comics as more than artifacts. Fantomah and Stardust are his stand out characters. They are more fascinating to me for their potential than for most of what Hanks did with them. They are in the public domain which means anyone can use them in art and stories. Other folks already have. That potential wakes my imagination. What could one do with a space wizard and a jungle vengence goddess?

These Days … 

So far, so good.

When I’m out delivering mail I’m often asked how I’m doing and that’s my answer. I wear my mask. I get my job done. I come home and do work that wakes me up.

Writing this newsletter and having my online shops has given me a focus that, until recently, I didn’t realize I was missing. I’ve enjoyed doing commissions the last few years. I’m proud of the work I’ve done. In between the commissioned work I did a lot of one off illustrations and posted them to my website. I did those for fun, for practice, to fill my time. Between commissions and one offs I kept pretty busy but everything I did was short term. If it was a commission, it had a deadline. If it was a one off it needed to be a small project because I was doing it around the commissions that had deadlines.

I finished my last commission in early autumn last year. With nothing on my plate I looked for something else to do. I considered setting up a Patreon account but I didn’t feel comfortable asking folks to send me money to just indulge my whims. If I was going to ask for support and subscriptions I wanted to be sure that I was providing something predictable. I was also interested in creating things that were real and physical, not just more digital ephemera.

And then I remembered that print on demand online stores existed. When something seems like a good idea I tend to dive in first and figure out what I’m doing as I go along. I signed up for a Zazzle store. I made some merchandise. I did some research and decided that Redbubble was a better platform for some of my work than Zazzle so I set up a store there too. Suddenly I had places to put all those one off illustrations I’d been doing between commissions.

As of this writing I have 174 products on Zazzle and 77 designs on Redbubble.Yes, none of this merchandise actually exists until someone orders it. That’s part of the fun. I’m creating potential products. I’m not putting up images that I think will sell. I don’t know what image will catch someone’s fancy. I’m delighted when someone orders something unexpected.

I’m now in the process of creating new art for my stores.I’m thinking more of specific designs. A cup design is not a greeting card design. What works on a t-shirt probably won’t fit on a mask. As I think of specific designs I’m also thinking of consistency and style and branding. Ew. Branding.

I don’t plan to apply a hard style to future work. I’m not going just do one type of image because I think it will be popular. I’m a terrible capitalist. I’m doing this for my own amusement as much as to sell things. Hell, I’m making art so I have something to write a newsletter about. By publishing this newsletter every Friday I’m prompting myself to make art to put in the shops. One thing leads to another and another and back.

The idea of branding comes up because I know I like consistency in the work of others so, probably, others would like consistency from me. I’ve got a number of characters I’m planning to use regularly. I’m creating model sheets of them so I can keep them recognizeable, consistent, from image to image. I’ll post those and other process sketches in the upcoming weeks. More art!

I’m waking up earlier so I have more time to work on the art, the shops, this newsletter before I head to USPS. I put in a little more time before I go to bed. (Big thanks to my wife for pointing me at my drawing board on those days when I think I just want to sit and stare into space.) Focus is … oddly relaxing. Instead of a lot of little projects I now have one (somewhat vaguely defined) project. It’s an evolving project. A work in progess. Heh.

Thank you for your help. You subscribed to this newsletter so I have to show up with something for you every Friday. Please feel free to forward this to anyone who you think would enjoy it. I welcome any comments or suggestions. Hit reply and start typing.

I hope your week has gone well. I hope you have the focus you want and projects that give you purpose. See you next week!

Skook WIP #6

We’ve made it six weeks into 2021! Congratulations to us! It’s Friday and time for another issue of the Skook Works In Progress newsletter i.e. this email. Here. Look at the pictures. Read the words. Form an opinion about something and send me an email.

You don’t have to do that part. I already appreciate that you’re spending some of your precious moments here. Thank you!

​Card Design Upgrades

Here is the latest set of before and after greeting card illustrations. The originals are scans of hand drawn illustrations. The afters are available in my Zazzle shop.

Mamas Don’t Let Your Puppies Grow Up to Be Cowhounds

He’s a good boy. A very good boy! He won’t fetch your slippers but he will round up the herd.

He’ll also look darned good doing it. He won’t get dusty or mudsplattered and he’ll always have a smile.

Dancing ThunderI have a friend who is very fond of rhinos. This happy critter was done as a commission for her. Below is my scan of the original. 
And below this is the modified version. What kind of music would inspire a rhino to dance?More Tea?This illustration was originally done as a thank you for a friend.

It’s the image I’ve made the least adjustments to. I increased the contrast so that the blacks are more prominent and the whites are brighter. I also replaced my original signature with my signature chop.

Feeding the Birds

All my illustrations are moments captured from a story. I don’t always know what the story is. I’m often simply trying to capture an image I’ve seen in my mind’s eye. If asked I know I could find a story to fit the illustration. I could find many. I’ve read a lot of horror stories and seen a lot of Sylvester and Tweety cartoons so if asked I might go to those sources for inspiration. That would be my mind following well worn grooves. I know that’s not the story here. I had friendly thoughts when I started drawing. 
To me, the additional colors suggest that friendlier story. 
Fantomah Needs Coffee

I did this black and white drawing of Fantomah in 2019. I like the drawing and thought it would look good on a mug. 
I made some adjustments – extending the illustration, changing the background and adding color – to make the design work better on the new “canvas”. Below is my process gif. 
Influences — Bernie Wrightson

I loved monsters as a kid. Some things don’t change. I started reading comics in the early Seventies. At the time the Comics Code had started to loosen up and comics featuring supernatural monsters – werewolves, vampires and the like – started being published. My allowance was small so, to begin with, I couldn’t buy any of these new horror comics but I did skim through them on the stands. I didn’t have friends who read comics but I was lucky enough to spend the afternoon reading the comics of the son of a friend of my mom’s. This comic was among the books. I mostly remember having read it. The cover stuck in my memory more than the story it is depicting.

Apparently that issue sold well enough and that story (Swamp Thing) got enough positive responses that DC Comics decided to launch a series based on the character. My budget didn’t let me buy the comic but I did check out each issue when I saw it on the comics rack.

Time passed. My allowance got a little bigger. I finally decided to start collecting Swamp Thing with issue 24. It was the final issue of that version of the series. It was cancelled after that. 
I was able to catch up with the whole series when we discovered Perelandra, a comic book shop. By then my brother and I both had paper routes and, for us, significant spending money. Swamp Thing issues 11-23 were drawn by Nestor Redondo. Redondo’s art was good but it was the art of the first ten issues that really hit me. The illustrator for those issues (and the original short story in House of Secrets) was Bernie Wrightson. I’d seen a lot of comic book art that I liked and thought was well done. Wrightson was one of the first artists I saw who both drew the way I wanted to and in a way I thought I eventually could.

Besides Swamp Thing I also found Wrightson’s work in the Warren black and white horror magazines. His style was a wonderful combination of the cartoonish and the grotesque. He drew handsome men, beautiful women and hideous monsters in way that had them all seem to exist in the same world.

Outside of comics Wrightson is probably best known for his illustrated version of Frankenstein first published in 1983. His work in the book is insanely detailed. His depiction of the creature is one of my favorites. 
I met Wrightson once in 2007 when he was a guest at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival. I had brought a copy of the first edition of his illustrated Frankenstein with me in the hopes of getting him to sign it. He looked at the book like seeing an old friend.

These Days …

At the end of each day I read a few pages from a book to Sarah. The last few years I’ve mostly read mysteries. We’ve got a stable of authors that we rotate through as their latest novel becomes available. We have two Sherlock Holmes adjacent series that are favorites – The Mycroft Holmes books by Kareem Abdul-Jabar and Anna Waterhouse and the Mary Russell books by Laurie R. King. The Abdul Jabbar/Waterhouse stories are prequels to Arthur Conan Doyle’s original stories and focus on the adventures of Sherlock’s older brother. The Mary Russell books are sequels that feature the adventures of a young woman who becomes Sherlock’s partner and, later, wife. There’s a forty to fifty year gap between the events of each series. We finished the most recent Mycroft Holmes book, The Empty Birdcage, a few weeks ago. We’re currently reading Laurie King’s not quite latest: Rivera Gold. Surprise, surprise! Zedzed is major character in both books.

Who?

“Basil” Vasily Zaharoff was a Greek arms dealer and general no-goodnik who lived from 1849 to 1936. He was known as Zedzed to his friends. I don’t remember having heard of him before meeting him in these novels. Apparently he’s the originator of that evil supervillain plan where you start a war so you can sell weapons to both sides. (More Sherlock Holmesian connections – that was Moriarty’s plan in both the movies A Game of Shadows and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.) When he appeared in Birdcage I had assumed that he was a fictional character. Hs appearance in Rivera meant that he was either a real person or the authors had collaborated on creating a villain. The latter seemed unlikely so I looked him up.

The Mary Russell books are full of meetings between the detectives and real historical people. It appears that Mycroft Holmes books will follow that pattern as well. I may want to do research on some of the background characters to see how “real” they are. There are many Sherlock Holmes sequel series that feature the character meeting prominent historical figures. There are also quite a few stories that feature Holmes meeting other (less) famous fictional detectives or dealing monsters from popular horror fiction. The character of Holmes has been in the public domain for years and he gets a lot of work because of that. This article at The Guardian goes into greater detail about what he’s up to and who is writing about him.

I’m not actually a fan of Sherlock Holmes. I think he’s a great character. I’m happy to try new movies or television series that feature him but I don’t really seek him out. I read most of Doyle’s short stories when I was a kid. I enjoyed most of them well enough. Holmes solves a few of the mysteries with deductions or facts that, even as a kid, I knew to be wrong. Either Doyle hadn’t done his research properly or new facts had been discovered since he wrote the stories. I’m generally forgiving of old stories having outdated information but the stories themselves didn’t make me feel like I had to read everything Holmes. Hound of the Baskervilles is the only one of the original novels that I read.

Doyle famously got tired of writing the Holmes series and tried to kill the character off. It’s not surprising. It’s hard work writing about someone who is smarter than you are. I don’t think Doyle was stupid but he did have a number of beliefs that Holmes would have thought illogical. It’s telling that Professor Challenger, Doyle’s attempt at another series character, is far more id than superego.

Sarah is a fan of Sherlock Holmes in that the character exists at the center of a Venn diagram featuring other things she’s a fan of – English costume dramas and murder mysteries. She’s watched the Jeremy Brett series more than once and we’ve caught most of the new films and series that have come out in the last 20 years. She isn’t so inspired that she’s hunted down other written versions besides the King or the Abdul-Jabbar/Waterhouse series. We started the King series in large part because we knew it featured a smart female detective working with Holmes. She started the Abdul-Jabbar/Waterhouse books because she’d liked enough of Jabbar’s nonfiction that she wanted to try his try at fiction.

Zedzed meets with Mycroft briefly in Birdcage. We’re a third of the way through Riviera and he has only been spoken about. I expect he’ll have a more prominent presence as the novel continues.

Outside of books, real life continues. I was disappointed to discover that getting a new President doesn’t automatically result in a new Postmaster General or Postal Board of Directors. Unless the current batch resigns or the new President fires them they’ll be on the job for another three years. Or more.

Last week I sent in my vote on the new contract between the union and USPS. We’ve been working without a contract since 2019. If this one gets ratified it will mean a little back pay and more certainty of employment for a few years.

Parcel volumes are low so I’m working less overtime. Smaller paychecks but more time to work on art.

Thank you for reading! I hope your life is pleasantly boring. If it is exciting I hope it’s because you’ve chosen that state. See you next Friday!

Skook WIP #4

It’s Friday! Time for another set of before (original drawings) and after (ready for print) images, a few words, an appreciation and a few more words. All you folks who have subscribed in the last couple of weeks – THANK YOU! Time is precious and I am honored that you’re spending some of your time here.

All of the final designs below are available in my Zazzle store. I’m mostly concentrating on creating greeting card and coffee mug designs right now but I will be creating other products down the line. Feel free to make requests!

Grizzly Bear Boogie

Yes, the Crocodile Rock was amazing but you haven’t gotten down until you’ve done the Grizzly Bear Boogie! The original version, as performed by actual bears, not the lame covers performed by tiny humans.
The above image is larger than most of the others in my card design series. It was originally done as a commission. Below is the version that appears in my shop. 
Koala Cone Contentment

When I was a kid, books about wild life told me that panda bears were not actually bears, that they were actually more closely related to raccoons. This was before DNA was used to determine animal ancestry and relation. It turned out that pandas look like bears because they are bears. Their divergent diets and odd “thumbs” are the result of evolutionary adaptations to their environment.

Koalas are not bears. At all. They don’t wear polo shirts and slacks either but I’ve taken liberties. I did an internet search to see if koalas are known to like ice cream but nothing turned up in the early results. I’m guessing they do. 
Koalas are also not blue. But with all the other liberties I’ve taken, what’s one more?

Any guesses as to what flavors he’s enjoying?
Not a Bronto

When I was a kid there was a dinosaur called a Brontosaurus. Unlike the Panda, who was misclassified, the Brontosaurus was misconstructed. Or, to be more precise, misreconstructed. When its fossil remains were displayed it was given the wrong skull. The skull actually belonged to a dinosaur named the Apatosaurus. The Brontosaurus was retired. Scientifically. But the Brontosaurus (the “Thunder Lizard”) was, to the general public, one of the most known and popular dinosaurs. Eventually the original fossil skeleton, minus the Apatosaurus skull, was designated Brontosaurus. Again.

That’s the simple version of the story. The above illustration isn’t based on any known species of Apatosaurus or Brontosaurus. It’s likely that neither species was pink. Or orange. But we’ll probably never know.

Little Monster Bubbles

This little monster knows how to blow some big bubbles!

Pink bubbles for a blue monster. It’s only blue in color. It’s very happy emotionally. 
Stardust in Your Cup

Stardust is a comic book character that has fallen into public domain. He’s fun to draw so he’s made a few appearances on my website. The image below was one of the daily drawings I did in 2019. 
I did those daily drawings in landscape format and I’ve found that they look pretty good on coffee mugs. The original drawings don’t cover the entire mug so, when possible, I’ve extended the illustrations to better fit the “canvas”. Below is the version of the illustration that appears on the mugs. 
And here is the mock up that I’m showcasing on Zazzle. Drink up! Stardust can’t be everywhere. You might need to take on an alien supervillain or two yourself!
Inspiration: Bill Peet

I own more Bill Peet books as an adult than I did as a kid. We owned a lot of books but our budget was limited so we didn’t just buy a book when we wanted to read it. Usually we checked it out of the library. My brother and I read a lot. We’d visit both our local library in Sebastopol and the main branch in Santa Rosa. Different branches had different selections of books. I think you could have books transferred from one branch to another but that would have required talking to a librarian. I did become friends with librarians when I was older. At picture book reading age I was much more reticent to ask grown up for things so I just read what the library had on its shelves.  
I’m not sure which of his books I read as a kid but there a couple that stand out. Cappy Boppy made a huge impression. I’d never heard of capybaras before. A giant ginea pig as a pet? Cool! I don’t currently own a copy of the book. If you’d have asked me I would have told you that the illustrations were in color. When I looked for example online I discovered that they were black and white. 
His other book that really impacted me was The Wump World. The Wumps were cute capybara type critters whose planet gets colonized by aliens in big ships that looked like Nixon heads. I don’t remember if we read this or Cappy Boppy first. I do own a copy of this book. 
Peet created his illustrations with a nib pen and colored pencils. The characters in the drawings are animated and lively and have clear, wonderful expressions.  I reread a few of his books as I was writing this entry. His stories were anywhere for 32 to 48 pages (and longer) and included a good chunk of text. They make me want to do my own childrens’ books.

These Days … 

My wife, Sarah, and I are gods. Small gods of a small universe with small furry worshippers. The universe is our apartment. The worshippers are our two cats, Chemo and Sabe. Sarah is the god of comfortable laps and food that can be sniffed but not tasted. I am the god that provides food and refreshes the litter box. For Chemo, the younger cat, I am also the god that throws toy mice and provides an auxilary lap when the god of comfortable laps is not available.

Some folks would suggest that we are not gods but simply servants to our cats. But what are gods? Gods are big mysterious beings who provide things according to their own whims. One prays to ones gods for boons but there’s no guarantee that the gods will follow through. Gods are, for most people, powerful yet unreliable personal assistants with too much responsibility and a poor respnse time who can’t be fired.

Chemo is very direct about his prayers. He makes them loudly. “This door is closed! Why is this door closed? I know you’re in there! Open this door! You’re home! Time to throw the mice! You’re sitting! Pick me up! Put me on your lap! Is it Tuesday yet? What is a Tuesday?”

Sabe is more subtle but more insistant. He sits at my feet and stares at me. If I fail to respond in a timely manner he bites my toe. It’s not a hard bite but it’s definitely noticeable. Answering his prayers is pretty easy. If he’s asking for my attention he probably wants to be fed. I sometimes try to pet him or provide him with a lap but, while he sometimes goes along with getting a good scratching, unless I follow through with a feeding he’ll be back there biting my toes.

This relationship seems to work for all of us. Yes, Sabe occasionally attempts to escape his small universe in order to explore the larger universe he has observed from the windows but those attempts are done with minor force and are easily countered. Yes, Chemo will yowl outside our bedroom door in the middle of the night. I’ve learned not to let him in. He isn’t planning to curl up and go to sleep. If I let him in he’ll wander around inside our bedroom yowling. Sometimes gods don’t answer prayers.

We keep them fed and warm. They provide us with attractive beings who we can love who don’t need to be taken on walks or borrow the car or watch stupid comedy shows or otherwise disturb the rhythms of our lives. Our divine responsibilities are manageable and simplier than our secular obligations. The cats seem more satisfied with their gods than many humans are with ours.

Thank you for reading. May your gods keep you safe and warm and answer your necessary prayers. See you next week!

Tuesday Night Party Club #52 – Goodbye 2020

Welcome to the last issue of the Tuesday Night Party Club. Thank you for joining me in 2020. I needed to practice writing so putting out this newsletter on a weekly basis has been a way to do that. Starting Friday, January 1st – in four days – I’ll be launching a new newsletter. I’m using the tinyletter.com service.

That newsletter will be called the Skook WIP. WIP for Work in Progress. Most of the images I presented here over the last year were of finished work I’d done in years past. The Skook WIP will focus on new and updated art. I’ll be showing illustrations at different stages, from rough sketches to finished images. I enjoy seeing other artists’ processes so hopefully you’ll enjoy seeing mine.


I will also be spotlighting a different artist each week with links to where you can see more of their work. Many of them will be folks whose work influenced me as I was growing up. Others will be folks who are inspiring me now.

And, of course, I’ll continue to comment and complain about my job at USPS. Complaining is what humans do. Am I glad to have a job during these days of sickness, economic uncertainty and political chaos? You bet! Am I frustrated by an economic and cultural framework that means most people are scraping by and feeling lucky that they aren’t in worse shape? Hell yes.

But that’s later. I’ve just survived another Christmas season. I’ve worked multiple 13 hour days and finished most of my shifts after the sun went down. From what I’ve read in the news and heard via shop talk, our station had less back up and higher staffing than a lot of others. So it could have been worse. Yay, not worse!

I have today off. This newsletter is a short one because I’m working on getting a headstart on the first issue of the Skook WIP. And I’ve got errands to run. And art to work on. And maybe take a nap. If you’ve already subscribed, THANK YOU! I plan continue to post links here but if you want to avoid the hassle of link following, well … use the form below.

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Here’s to a better year in 2021! See you on the 1st!

Tuesday Night Party Club #47

Gallery – 2019 Daily Sketches 303-332

This is the penultimate collection of my daily sketches from 2019. 30 images all in one covenient place.

Story Seed #96

Once again, there are thirty images above. They all have stories. The story you find in the illustration will be different than the one someone else tells.

Recommendation

This week I’m recommending David Lasky’s Etsy shop. David is a cartoonist, art teacher and friend. His work is lovely and eclectic. Check it out!

Local News

Rain and cold and darkness have settled over the Pacific Northwest. The holidays loom but we’re staying away from other humans and their icky diseases. The mail and parcel volumes have increased as expected so I’m getting overtime whether I want it or not. Wearing a mask in addition to rain gear leaves me with just a narrow strip with which to observe the world. I feel disconnected and unbalanced. The mask does keep my face warm. That’s an unexpected bonus.

I’m also officially a Guy Who Wears Glasses. As I got used to the new prescription I started wearing them in more and more situations and now I wear them more than I don’t. I go without them in situations where I need to have a mask on because I haven’t yet taken the steps to prevent them fogging but otherwise they’re just part of my wardrobe. The eye doctor recommended cataract surgery. Supposedly that will correct my vision issues so the glasses may not be a permenant accessory. I won’t be taking any steps toward surgery until after the holidays though. Too much to do, not enough time to recover.

I’m continuing to add images to my Zazzle and Redbubble shops. Both shops recently had complete strangers make purchases. That was encouraging. One can’t become a mogul by selling just to ones friends.

I’m currently completing and/or coloriing older illustrations of Little Red aka The Mighty Nizz. The image below is from 2011 or 2012. I’m pretty sure it’s the third time I’d drawn the character. I found it when I was clearing and organizing a stack of art and art supplies this summer. It was mostly still pencils, only the lettering and the bear in the tree had been inked. I wish I’d remembered to scan that version but we’ll have to settle on the completed inks.

From that to this –

I also colored two images from 2015. This –

Became this –

And this –

Became this –

I actually prefer this version to the more detailed one I did later. I’m making both available in my shops. I long ago learned that my taste is not necessarily my audience’s. Unless I hate an image I’m likely to make it available.


In 2021 this newsletter will get a new title – Skook WIP (Works in Progress) and will be hosted at tinyletter.com. If you subscribe, each issue will come directly to your email address. I’ll continure to post links to issues here but, if you want cut down on link hopping, please use the form below to sign up –

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It’s Thanksgiving this week. We’re keeping it small. Just me, my wife, our nephew and his girlfriend. Easy enough since we share the apartment. Others were invited but the C19 resurgence is keeping them home. I’m working the day before Thanksgiving so any cooking I do will happen in the morning on Thursday. Since we’re keeping the menu small I don’t expect to do much. Since I’ll be tired from the day before I really don’t plan to do much.

Thank you for dropping by. I hope that your holiday is warm and relaxing. We’ve been in a slow, stupid apocalypse for months now. Celebrate by doing what makes you happy and keeps you safe. See you next week!