Continuing on, I’ve been spending my mornings doing the Center of Cartooning Studies One-Week Cartooning Workout! Or, as they call it, the #CCS1WeekWorkout on the Twittersphere. If you are interested in participating, the program is free and open to anyone, find out more about it here: http://www.cartoonstudies.org/index.php/programs/ccs-one-week-cartooning-workout/
I’ll also note that I’m independent of them and doing the program and showing my work just so others interested in cartooning know this program exists, becuase I sure didn’t before happening upon it on Twitter!
Onto Day two! Day two is all about introducing your characters to readers. I kinda already did that in my last post, the characters are really just myself and my goofy dog Wheatley. Any-hoodle-doogle-poodle, this is what today’s daily workout description is:
Doodle out two different characters and get to know them by drawing them in different positions and with varied facial expressions (happy, sad, angry, etc.). Then explore your characters even further by answering this simple questionnaire.
After you get to know your characters better, create an eight-panel comic using only dialogue (no backgrounds) where your characters resolve a conflict or misunderstanding.
As noted before, there are tips and a link to the questionnaire provided in the e-mails. I am not posting them here, please sign up for the program to get them yourself!
So, the first thing I actually did was the second thing suggested, I filled out the questionnaire- as my dog. Who wants to read a questionnaire about me? No no, my dog is far more entertaining, or at least, me answering as my dog is more entertaing. Here is the result below:
Even wrote out the responses in crayon! Well, the crayon brush in Manga Studio at least?
The next thing I did was do the sketches of Wheatley and myself. One thing I love drawing is all of Wheatley’s wavy hair and all the funky directions it sticks out in. He has black paches of hair in his overall white coat (it’s called “partied”) which I just fill in with small hash marks.
Now that last bit of today’s assignment is to make an 8-panel comic using just dialogue and now backgrounds. It is suggested that you use an 8×11″ (A4) size piece of paper to accomplish this, but you can put your panels however you want. I ended up drawing this in my 9×12″ sketch book. The topic is a fairly common one in our house (or any house wth multiple pets who interact), the sharing of toys.
Wheatley’s favorite toy is by far, a yellow fuzzy duck named “Ducky. He carries it around everywhere, even takes it outside with him on nice days and sits with it while watching the world go by, and knows that his toy is called Ducky. If you ask him to fetch it, he will, even when hidden somewhere in the house. Now, Portuguese Water Dogs (which both of mine are) have a habit of needing to self-sooth, or comfort, themselves. This is done by finding a fuzzy toy they love and just knead it while sucking on the toy, much like how cats are known to do. It’s like when a little kid sucks their thumb, it helps calm down and relax them. Mickey does this on a daily basis, but Wheatley only occasionally does it, and when he does, it is with lil’ ol’ Ducky.
Mickey however, is also kind of a bully to Wheatley. She is his older aunt, and she will take toys and chews away from him if she feels like it. She will eventually let him have it back, however. If she isn’t playing by their set rules though, Wheatley will come find me or start barking. You know it’s serious when he barks (and you know it is super serious if Mickey does!) So, this comic just plays out a scenario that’s happened a few times in our house.
My favorite panel is panel #4, where Wheatley is just barking. I don’t know why, but I’m smitten with it and think I did a good job.
While perusing my Twitter feed last week, I ran into an interesting series of little cartooning exercises put out by the Center of Cartoon Studies (@cartoonstudies on twitter.) The program is just a one week cartooning exercise program (or workout) and is availble for free! It is open to anyone who is just starting out as a comic arist or animator to those of us who have been here for awhile. As for me, I’ve been semi-professionally/ professionally making comics for over a decade, so a workout program is never a bad thing to do.
What the Center of Cartoon Studies (CCS for short) does, is every day the center sends out an e-mail explaing what the daily project is. Some daily projects are short (like today’s) and some a bit longer, like tomorrow’s. Make sure that when you check your e-mail, you check your spam or promotions filters! I use Google Mail and their daily e-mail kept getting put into my promotions folder, I had to fish it out of there and put it into my primary. I may have accidently deleted one or two e-mails the first few days before undoing the action. Whoops!
So, Day 1’s assigntment was:
Create a four-panel comic. It can be autobiographical, experimental, a collection of facts about something that interests you, or your day’s to-do list. Cartooning is about finding a sequential rhythm. Think of the four-panel comic as the haiku of cartooning.
Under the description (and a wonderful gif image of comics being drawn) they do give a few tips about how to make a four panel comic. I won’t provide them here (hey,sign up for the workout to find out what the tips are.)
For my four panel comic, I went with something that was slice-of-life and very inspirational for strip comics- the life of my dogs. Especially Wheatley, who is a little clumsy clown of a pup. This is what I came up with:
It’s a simple comic, most strip comics are better if they are addressing a simple topic. In this comic, I addressed Wheatley’s desire to go outside and play in the snow. Wheatley, I should note, is trained to ring a strip of bells attached to our back door to let me know when he wants out (or food, or water, or snacks, that boy knows it gets my attention.) I’ll also note that I didn’t draw this digitally, this is from a page in my sketch book.
For refernce, here is a picture of Wheatley below:
Last week I managed to go somewhere I never thought I would ever have a chance to visit, Las Vegas, Navada (USA.) It isn’t because I have anything against gambling or partying (although I’m not interested in either,) but I grew up far away from Las Vegas and now live basically an entire continent away.
As you can see from this handy map, the red dot is Las Vegas, the blue dot is where I live, and it is a super long flight across the country. Honestly, I had a layover in Detroit, Michigan, the total travel time for me was about 10 hours. I arrived very late at night in Las Vegas, about 11PM, which equaled 2AM East coast time. Yikes! Thanks time zones.
The next day while Mike was at a conference (the reason why we were visiting Las Vegas to begin with) I bopped around the Strip. First I took some time to eat breakfast at a delightfully kitchy “English Pub” for coffee and a bear claw. Because naturally when you’re in an English Pub, that’s what you’re going to eat and drink. (>_>;;;
Honestly, everything in Vegas is super kitchy and not at all representative of what England/ Luxor/ Itally/ any other theme of a casino, is. That’s part of the draw of Vegas, I guess? Being surrounded by fantasy 24/7. It was funny after first, but got tiring with all the artificalality after a day or two (this coming from a chick with green hair.)
Before getting to Vegas, I had purchased a ticket to visit the Bodies Exhibit at the Luxor Casino which was a mile down the strip from where we were staying at the Bellagio. It was fun visiting the Luxor and taking photos with all the other casinos on the south side of the Las Vegas Strip. I’ve managed to miss the Bodies Exhibit every time it visited cities I lived in because no one I knew wanted to go with me! So in the end I went alone- and it was a fantastic exhibit.
The Excalibur Hotel and Casino- it’s Medieval Times on steroids.
The Luxor Sphinx, which is actually the enterance to the Luxor Resort and Casino from the free tram.
New York, New York resort and casino which is right across the street from the Excalibur.
By the time I was done visiting the Bodies Exhibit, it was lunchtime and Mike finished up his final day of the conference. We met up at an outdoor mall outside of Balley’s Casino which housed one of the best ramen shops in Vegas- Katanaya. Everyone who works there is Japanese, and walking in was like traveling back to a ramen-ya in Tokyo. There is a nice variety of ramen and curry dishes, but it doesn’t have the sushi burritos like the Katanaya in San Fransico does.
Lemon Shio ramen from Katanaya, and Melon soda.
The waitress laughed when I excitedly ordered the Melon Soda, and made the comment jokingly that I’ve obviously have had Melon Soda before. Indeed I have, it was my favorite drink at restaurants around Japan, and my hometown in Indiana once had a similar drink called “Green River,” which has been discountinued. So in short, I love Melon Soda, but where I live, it is nearly impossible to get.
Finally, the last thing we did on this jam-packed Friday was see Cirque du Soleil’s Beatle’s Love show at the Mirage.
This was something I was deeply looking forward to. I am a huge Beatles fan, and have owned the soundtrack to Beatles Love since it came out in 2006! I have waited 11 years to see this show in Vegas (because it is only in Vegas at the perminant theater in the Mirage Casino.) The soundtrack is fantastic and I may have it memorized, however they just recently changed up the line-up of songs which resulted in the addition and subtraction of some songs from the original track list. I’m not surprised that they did this, makes sense after a decade of shows, but you could really tell when something had been added because it just wasn’t as- spectacular. It felt out of place, even Mike noticed it and he isn’t familair with the show at all. What I did love about the show was all the behind-the-scenes set recordings of the guys talking to one-another. You could tell how much they loved working with each other at one time, joking around and having fun while recording tracks.
On Saturday we went to the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, which is also known as the Mob Museum. As a true-crime writer (my book Ohio’s Haunted Crime came out last year) this is a topic I am super interested in. Also, Mike’s family were former gangsters in the North Side Gang under Bugs Moran (as the family tales go.) So, it was quite moving to see the actual wall from the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre. I won’t go into the massacre here, but it targeted the North Side Gang and killed seven people and later a dog (named high ball.)
Old Las Vegas city courtroom, which saw a lot of mobsters in its day.
The St. Valentines’s Day Massacre Wall- February 14, 1929.
A mock of “Ol’ Sparky” from Sing Sing Prison in New York State.
The Mob Museum is fantastic, but will take an entire afternoon to do. It is just off the Freemont Street Experience, which is what we did afterwards. Mike and I may have spent an entire hour just sitting at a coffee house and watching the diverse Vegas crowd of locals and tourists march by. Photos wouldn’t do it justice, but I did take two short videos of what it looks like.
While crusing around Freemont Street, we ran into a HUGE off-road racing event. There was a large variety of cars and trucks that have been outfitted to race on this large offroad track just North of Vegas. While waiting for our tacos as a local tacoria, we ran into a guy who was racing in this event! He was telling us about how many of these cars, which have been so lovingly worked on to race, will most likely be destoried during the race! Completely totaled. That fact just blows me away!
We also found the Las Vegas Container Park, which was a fun place to get some food from a local restaurant. We chose Pinches Tacos, which had fabulous food and specialized in meats and fillings you usually don’t see at your local tacoria, such as cow tongue and cacus tacos. I didn’t order the cacus, but I do love cow tongue, and happily ordered that in addition to fish tacos.
After crusing around downtown Las Vegas, the two of us were beat. One thing that has surprised me about Vegas is the amount of walking you do there, we were averaging 9 to 10 miles of walking a day (good thing I packed sneakers!) So, Friday night we just crashed in the hotel room. Before we got back, we bought some gyros (yay!) from a food stall and some chips and drinks from the CVS that was across from our hotel. We then just stayed in and watched Arrival with Amy Adams. Like I said, we’re not big partiers.
Saturday, our last full day in Vegas, was more sightseeing, me hosting the Paranormal View radio show remotely, and topped off with the Pen and Teller show. We started the day visiting with Mike’s cousin who lives in Vegas and having brunch at her favorite restaurant- Eat. It is right behind the Container Park in downtown Las Vegas. There is a limited brunch menu, but the food on it is delicous! I went with the pancake stack, and wow is it huge! The pancakes are heavy and fried on the same griddle that the bacon and sausge is cooked, so you get that taste of bacon when you eat them. So, they are not for my vegatarian and vegan friends out there.
We then just cruised around the Las Vegas Strip and saw the sights. Then, earlier than I’m used to, we broadcast the Paranormal View Radio Show! You can listen to it below:
After the radio show, we hussled to the Rio Resort and Casino to see Pen and Teller’s comedy and magic show. We picked up our tickets, and then had dinner at the Rio- it was the only time we had a meal in a casino. We chose a Pho place, where I had some delicious duck pho and Mike had the special pho of the day. Pen and Teller were fantastic! We then hauled our very tired selves back to the hotel to sleep for the 3 hours we got before heading back to Rhode Island.
Our friends picked us up at the airport, and to welcome us back to the East Coast, we had some wieners!
Overall, it was a fantastic trip and Vegas surprised me a lot. I was expecting a large around of articifiality, but in reality we were greeted by some very friendly and genuine locals. One observation I have is that Vegas is really in a tug-of-war struggle between old Vegas supporters (when Vegas was run by the mob) and supporters of the progressive, family-friendly Vegas that it is now trying to build now that Vegas has “gone straight” (not mob run). There are people who really miss the old golden age of Vegas with the Rat Pack, showgirls, and gambling in smoky halls. Honestly, I’m loving this new Vegas with international tourists, a strong local food scene, and a growing museum and exhibit culture. I’ll definetly return to Vegas to explore some more!
Happy to announce that my studio, Klockow Comics, has a new $10 Patreon Tier. Now, if you become a $10 a month Patron to my studio, Klockow Comics (which supports Jinxed), you will recieve a character sketch card. Each card is done in black and white line art, is unique, and features different character from Jinxed.
You can find my studio on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/klockowcomics
This is the highest amount a Patron can pledge to my studio and there is a limit of 10 available each month. If you become a recurring patron, I will try my best to make sure you don’t get repeat characters. A mailing address is required for these sketch cards, which do come in a plastic jacket.
February 27th is to be #PokemonDay on social media, and to celebreate Pokemon’s 20th anniversary, I’m drawing a variety of Pokemon during my morning drawing warm-ups. I do want to note that I don’t sell any of this fanart, but have no problem drawing it for drawing warm-ups and sharing them on social media!