Monday, December 28, 2020

Upon the Ending of a Year of Bladerunner, Welcoming the Era of Mad Max and the Reigning in of Horses

 It will be a new year in a few days and much of society will not miss 2020 as it fades into the past. It's been a hard and trying year for a lot of us. The virus has taken loved ones and the economy has impacted so many of us it is like trying to keep your head above waters in tumultuous seas. 


But forgive me if I am still a bit apprehensive about 2021, after all Mad Max is set in 2021. But then again 2020 was the year that Bladerunner was set in and though we didn't get replicants and flying cars that patrol the skies, we did get sex robots, so maybe the pleasure model Pris became a reality. 

You know the old saying, New Year Resolutions are made to be broken so I am hesitant to make commitments out loud lest they return to haunt me. But I have decided to devote much of my energy to INK this year and want to at least complete a story arc that will take at least three or four more chapters. 

The shops I have online have given me a passive income, but nothing that would be a sustainable income and hence I picked up a part time gig. This had led me to be honest with myself about the direction I need to go, I expected too much from online sales. After viewing multiple videos on online marketing and trying to be self promoting without being annoying is a fine balance. Also facing the reality that really your work is more of a niche and not mainstream and trying to fit a square peg into a round hole is a frustrating endeavor. I simply had to face the reality that what I do is not for everyone and that though I am grateful for every purchase and will continue what I do, I can't rely on it for the returns I had hoped.

Trust me, if I knew the secret to make it rich online, I would tell you. But I can say this, marketing can be a full time job and it can also drain you creatively. You also have to gauge the market and what the market wants, fads are a thing, unfortunately I have never been a slave to fashion. I don't say that haunting pride, but with honesty. 

Every artist wants appreciation for what they do. If they say they don't, they're lying. I am fortunate enough to know that much of my work is greeted with appreciation and it means much to me in fact, probably even more than monetarily. I am foolish like that. Though my expectations were high and weren't met, it really doesn't dampen my spirit of creativity. 

It's probably difficult to explain, but being an artist is an extension of what and who I am. I create a world or worlds I like to play in and if it entices others to visit those worlds, my job is done. 

Though I am hesitant to build up expectations of the New Year, this doesn't mean that I am not hopeful. My personal goal is to finish INK, which means I will probably be doing less Tee designs. I am not saying I am ending it, not at all, just focusing more on finishing INK. 

Artist of the Month will change too. I will be focusing on artists that inspired me. Originally I wanted to do it to bring unknown artists to the spotlight because I feel other artists should support other artists. To establish a network so to speak. In a way I have done that and glad I did. I will continue to promote other artists and also suggest that they do the same. But it is time for me to reign in my horses and focus on my own creative survival. So beginning in January I will be more focusing on artistic inspirations.

It's also a time for reflection, what areas I need to hone in my craft and what areas I need to lessen. That's how I see art, as a craft, a mad craft, like seeing myself more as an artisan than artist so to speak if that makes sense. Illustrators always enchanted me more than Fine Artists. It is the way I am bent I suppose.

I recently turned 64. So with age, expectations lower and you start to reflect more on what you haven't done that what you have done. So INK is something I don't want to haunt me as I grow older thinking what it would have been if I didn't finish it. 



This year, 2021 is the Chinese Year of the Ox whose traits are diligence, persistence and honesty. Three traits that I will attempt to aspire to. 








 And to everyone, here's to a New Year...get the flames burning. 

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Upon Poe and the Artistic Imagination and Art Pirates Make Jack Sparrow Cry

 

It should come to no surprise that Edgar Allan Poe’s work has been a source of inspiration to artists. Poe work resided in not only in the realm of horror but also the fantastical. His imagery, forged in haunting prose, fired the imagination of a multitude of artists from Gustave Dore to contemporary artists such as the late Bernie Wrightson and Ian Miller.


Horror is what Poe is known for, yet many also are unaware that it was Edgar Allan Poe that created the short story format and the first detective prior to Sherlock Holmes, C. August Dupin, whose first appearance was in Poe’s 
mystery, “The Murders of the Rue Morgue”.


The Raven by Dore





No illustrated volumes of Poe’s work were ever published in his lifetime, yet near the end of the 1800’s artists began to illuminate his prose and poetry. Artists like the engraver Gustave Dore and illustrators such as Harry Clarke, Aubrey Beardsley and Arthur Rackham took their turns depicting Poe’s worlds and words into illustrated works of art with each artist rendering their own vision.


It would be fair to say Poe is timeless. His writing into the dark corners of the psyche layered with otherworldly prose and Jungian imagery remains fertile ground today even for film makers. Even his “Eureka”, what he self described as a lengthy prose poem, his own attempt to explain the origins of creation, though scientifically naive due to the limitations of scientific knowledge of the times and perhaps his own romanticism, is a highly creative work of insight. “Eureka” at least revealed that Poe was not only just a poet and author of horror, but a profound and inquisitive thinker.



Left, illustration by Ian Miller from "The Fall of the House of Usher", I have yet to find if this was ever published. Ian Miller did several illustrations for Melvin Peake's Ghormenhast trilogy that never saw publication. It's possible his illustrations for Poe may have seen the same fate. 

Ian Miller is a huge inspiration for me, his line work, his meticulous detail as well as his surreal imagery has always struck a chord with me. Ian Miller is perhaps best known for his Warhammer illustrations for Game Workshop, but his work has also been featured on covers of the works of Ray Bradbury and H. P. Lovecraft. 

Currently he is re-working his webstie but is on Instagram under the user name Edwindorf. 

Right, the title page from the late Bernie Wrightson's "The Black Cat" published in Creepy Magazine published by Warren. Bernie did a number of Poe illustrations, both paintings and inks. Bernie's style of inking is masterful and admittedly inspired by the 19th Century illustrator, Franklin Booth. His illustrated "Frankenstein" is a classic work and gained attention from the art world with his piece "I Shall Be With You on Your Wedding Night" from his illustrated version of Shelly's classic gaining over a million dollars at auction. 

Bernie began his career in comics, his use of ink, his dynamic compositions gained him early recognition and his contribution to comics is unquestioned. He was prolific and obviously loved the medium. He has illustrated works by  Stephen King including "Cycle of the Werewolf" and "The Stand". 






Left, illustration by the Irish stain glass artisan and illustrator Harry Clarke published in 1916 and is always in print. Currently there is an edition that was recently published with a forward by Neil Gaiman. 

Clarke's work inspired both the Art Deco and Art Nouveau movement. His style was decorative and unique with meticulous line work and design depicting not only the horror of Poe's work but also the fantastical.  

His first printed work were illustrations for Hans Christian Anderson's book of Fairy Tales. 

Clark also created over 130 stained glass windows after he and his brother took over their father's business after his death in 1921. 




Below is my own homage to Poe, my youth being filled with visions, dreams and nightmares of the Usher Estate, the Crimson clad figure of Death and the ghastly murders at Rue Morgue and of course my fondness for Black Cats. Currently I am offering it on Amazon as a Tee. 



Just a Quick Note:

Art theft is very real and unfortunately I have been a victim of it as well. I don't make a lot of money selling my work online at best it is a passive income. So when someone steals one of my pieces and makes a few bucks off of it, it cuts into my profits. That is why I use a watermark on most of my images and even though I add a copyright logo, it still doesn't prevent those who actively mine others' work for their own gain. Since I spend weeks and months to create a piece, yeah, it frustrates and angers me a bit. Though I have to admit, yeah, I am flattered that they thought my work was good enough to steal. But that is beside the point. 

I sell my work at the following sites.


On Amazon I sell only Tees, if you see my work on something else currently, unless I post it here, it's not me who is selling it. 

This is the link to all my Tees on Amazon



Below is the link to my shop on Redbubble.



I do have a shop on Etsy, but I don't maintain it and I am considering closing it. I also have Tees available on Teepublic.  This shop was opened when Amazon restricted items for sale due to the Covid 19 virus. I will soon incorporate those designs to Amazon in the future. Currently though, it is still active and has some designs and art that are not available on Amazon as of yet.

I know my work is spread out on multiple platforms and due to the recent image theft I am considering just keeping my focus on Redbubble and Amazon. 

Currently though, I haven't had much time to maintain my Patreon Site and may close it. Between working a part time gig, working on artwork and continuing INK, I confess I neglected it and most likely will close it. I have not decided as of yet. 

If you wish to follow me on Instagram, it is xvintagecrowx

Art theft is simply something an artist has to contend with. It is going to happen, it's part of the game I suppose. 




Monday, November 23, 2020

Upon the Earnest of Journaling and a Subtle Promotion of Library Paraphernalia

I was watching a Morning News Talk Show and Laurence Fishburne was a guest talking about how he was going through his old journals during his self quarantine. Personally I have kept journals off and on and like Fishburne stated during his interview when he was reading some of his old entries, you realize how crazy some of your thoughts were. 

I have returned to journaling recently, wanting to keep a record of the trials and tribulations I have had to endure during the pandemic. Everyday I make an entry, even if it is just a couple of sentences to keep back into the habit. I want to be able to go back in a couple of years and reflect on this period of history, and it is history, to remember just what transpired and see what hopes and what disappointments I faced and how I coped.

Journaling has a rich history. In fact journals of prominent figures have been essential in constructing periods of history. The journals of folk in wagon trains that moved westward kept detailed experiences of pioneers showing us that the authors were far from the illiterate characters depicted in films but were in fact lettered men and women. That books and newspapers were the mainstream media, much as film and television are to us today.  So it is only expected that people were well read during that period of time. 


Many contemporary authors journal, such as Neil Gaiman who even keeps one journal online, well it is actually a blog, but he calls it a journal. Authors use journals not only to reflect and record their life but also to jot down ideas, conversations and incidents that later show up in their stories. 

Journaling and creativity go hand in hand. Also it is great therapy. I don't think you can get any more masculine than Ernest Hemmingway who wrote "Write clear and hard about what hurts." 

And of course we have the diary of a young lady that brought to light the horrors of being Jewish in Nazi Germany, Anne Frank, "I can shake off everything as I write; my sorrows disappear, my courage is reborn."

Journaling is not only of form of self care, it is also a way to confront our shortcomings, celebrate our successes but also get in touch with our humanity.  We are all stories waiting to be read or not to be read but by our own selves if only to remind us that we do have a voice. 

So keeping with the long tradition of journaling I designed some journal covers, mostly in a whimsical way. Note: All images are under copyright.






More journal designs are available on my Redbubble site in the Library Collection.

I have also included journals for cat lovers to keep a record of their feline's machinations.




The Library Collection also offers posters of Literary Characters, Lovecraftian Themes and bookplates such as below. These are vinyl stickers that can be used as bookplates inside the cover of your book as well as stickers you can apply to most surfaces. 




 The Library Collection is something that I took a lot of pride in creating items for the library because of my fondness for books. I hope that you enjoy these offerings and in the future I will create more. 

Friday, June 26, 2020

Digital versus Traditional Isn't a Debate, It's a Preference

There seems to be a debate over traditional artwork versus digital artwork. Before I continue I should say this, I really don't consider myself an "Artiste" per say, but rather an artisan or craftsman. Art is all inclusive and I believe anyone can be an artist. Art is about personal vision and creativity. So in a sense I all of us are artists in our own way. When it comes to illustrating, comic making, story telling etc. I consider that a craft, a somewhat mad craft, but a craft.

Brian Bolland
Like all crafts, a craftsman has to has his tools, that what this blog post is about.

David Petersen
Speaking from my stand point alone, digital versus traditional isn't even a debate, it is simply a matter of preference. There are many high profile artists in comics that have made a seamless transition to digital, such as Brian Bolland who did Alan Moore's "Killing Joke". At first I was skeptical about using the new digital inking programs out there, but Bolland ended that skepticism. Even Tod McFarline of "Spawn" has gone digital. But, there are just as many still doing it traditionally, such as DC's Jim Lee and David Petersen of "Mouse Guard". I am not referring to digital coloring, only inking and penciling. I will talk about coloring later.



As far as I what feel personally, I am good with because I am not on a crusade to save traditional nor am I on a mission to convert others to digital. I am a hybrid, in a sense. I wouldn't have a following if it weren't for the internet or for digital. The internet is an artist's boon, especially for unknowns or garage artists like myself.

I say I am hybrid because when it comes to drawing and inking, my preference is, and hasn't changed and most likely won't, traditional. It's a matter of style I suppose. If I was someone who used bolder lines, less line work and less crosshatching, then I would probably go digital but then I wouldn't have an original. Though artists make a lot of money from their prints, the originals, well, they are one of a kind and more sought after by collectors. This isn't going to change.

But really for me it is a matter of control. I love the tactile feel of a pen against paper, the tension of knowing that if I make a mistake, well, the correction part is going to take effort. I should tell you that I seldom if ever use white out. I have in one case and pretty much regretted it. But ink is more correctable than people think. All you need is a stead hand and a exacto knife. Gently removing a layer of paper, so thinly, you get to feel like a surgeon removing a tumor. There are also electric erasers, but I prefer a knife. Also this is where digital comes in. Digital can correct most any mistakes you do on traditional drawing and inking.

Also since I use anything from a .003 to .005 pen when rendering and build up tone after tone with lines, well, that would take a good chunk of memory from any inking program currently. Plus it wouldn't be as fun...if I am not having fun...well...
Ezekiel Crowe Traditional Ink

Now coloring, I am digital all the way. Less mess, correct on the fly, change hues, saturation etc. But let me explain why...because I am not nearly skilled in painting as I am in inking. I don't have the confidence in color as I do in black and white and I kind of actually prefer black and white inks...always have. Color is it's own science. In fact when I see a traditionally painted piece, I am pretty much in awe at the skill required. This isn't to say great digital paintings don't require the same amount of skill, color is color, you have to master it, but seeing an original painting is always an experience for me personally.

The same goes for lettering. Todd Klein is a legend in the industry. You can pick up almost any Vertigo title and see his name. Even when digital lettering was hitting the industry, Klein for the most part still hand lettered a lot of the "Sandman" issues by Neil Gaiman. He has also taken his lettering and turned them into fonts that he uses. Klein is not out of work and still very much in demand and his digital fonts are copywritten. That inspired me to take some of my own lettering and turn it into a font that I use in INK and will more than likely do more. If I hand lettered INK, I would go insane.
Todd Klein

Example of Todd Klein's work
In the end, traditional art does not need saving, it's not gone, it hasn't died and it isn't a dinosaur. It's simply a matter of choice. Digital should not only be a welcome addition, it should also be an additional tool or if one chooses the primary tool. I find that people that want to convert others to either side is usually like an alcoholic who is afraid of drinking alone because he fears he might be an alcoholic. Instead, just marry it, and like any relationship, it takes two, sometimes takes compromise and in the end it is all about what works best for you. Just do it!




Font I created for Ink

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Artist of the Month for June: Derik Hefner

This month I had the pleasure to interview Derik Hefner. Soon as I saw some of his work I knew I had encountered a kindred spirit. I am grateful he gave me this opportunity to answer some questions about his inspirations, his projects and being involved locally with the Artistic Community.



Looking at your work, especially the graphic novel you are working on, you obviously are a fan of the medium. What comic book artists inspired you and what writers fired your imagination?


The first artist I could recognize by style alone was John Byrne. I was 6 when the first issue of his Superman series came out. I was slightly confused at the time as to how it could be Superman’s first issue, but Byrne’s art was so distinct, his characters had mass and substance and form, and his backgrounds were full of gritty detail. And Terry Austin’s inks brought out all of that perfectly. Classic X-Men was coming out then too, so Byrne had a big presence in my early formative years, right when I was really getting sucked into comics in a big way. Other influences span the gamut: Will Eisner, Möebius, Bill Sienkiewicz, Chris Bachalo, Frank Miller, Paul Pope, Becky Cloonan, Sean Gordon Murphy, Gabriel Bá, Fabio Moon, Jamie Hewlett, Jordi Bernét, Mike Allred... I could go on and on with the artists I’ve picked up this or that from. Every artist’s style is a sort of Frankenstein’s Monster in that way. But looking at my work now, I can see that Byrne is the standard from which I’ve deviated. All the weirder influences just dress up and distort that Byrne skeleton, which is baked in.

John Byrne

As for writers, in comics, Chris Claremont was a huge influence. Over his decades-spanning X-Men run, he put you inside the heads of such a large cast, bouncing back and forth between thought bubbles and third-person narration in a way that you rarely see anymore. He provided an interesting lens through which to view the world. A community of people who would otherwise be loners, misunderstood and reviled by the world in spite of (or because of?) the fact that their cause is right and just. And taking the brunt of all that negative energy and giving back something positive instead. That resonates as loudly now as it did then.

Other writing influences, both within comics and elsewhere, is another long list (and I know I’m going to leave a lot out someone that I’ll regret not mentioning later), but immediately springing to mind are Grant Morrison, Brian K. Vaughan, James Robinson, Alan Moore, Ed Brubaker, Matt Fraction, Rick Remender, Jason Aaron. Early Vertigo comics are a high point of what comics can be, and I revisit those often. Outside of comics my reading interests are varied, but with fiction I tend to gravitate towards magic realism. Which is probably a testament to the comics influence, since when you think about it, virtually all comics could be considered magic realism. Kurt Vonnegut, Tom Robbins, Neil Gaiman, Chuck Palahniuk, Etgar Keret, Haruki Murakami. I’ve been singing the praises of China Miéville for several years now. Jim Thompson, a fellow Okie, is another favorite. Hunting down his books has been an ongoing project.


Derik Hefner


When I see your work I am reminded of Farel Dalrymple and Troy Nixey who worked on Mike Mignola's Jenny Finn. Also your panel layouts and camera angles look very professional. Do you do story boards before committing to a layout?

Jenny Finn
That’s very flattering! I wouldn’t point to either of them as direct influences, but it’s always interesting to hear what others see that I don’t. Someone recently compared my work to that of Brendan McCarthy, whose name I was more familiar with than his work. That led to me checking out his collaborations with writer Peter Milligan, and damned if I didn’t see it. If I was on the outside looking in, I’d think he was one of my biggest direct influences, yet I’d had almost no exposure to his work (outside of his covers, which were mostly painted). It’s a great experience, coming across kindred artists like that, arriving at the same place from different routes. It’s like when you make a new friend that you feel like you’ve known forever, but through art without any personal contact. It’s a form of connection that would be unavailable if not for art. Let me make clear, I’m not putting myself on McCarthy’s level, but it does feel like we inhabit the same creative world, and I’ve been greatly inspired by his work. Sounds like I need to do a deep dive into Dalrymple and Nixey now!
Brendan McCarthy


Regarding panel layouts and angles, my prime directive as a visual storyteller is to lead the eye through the page as naturally as possible. Time is conveyed through space on a comic page, so an awkwardly placed panel or word balloon can create a hiccup that takes the reader out of the story momentarily. If you look at film, every shot occupies a space of exactly the same shape and dimensions. So leading the eye through the story involves considerations like having the focal point of a shot— the area of the screen you’re looking at— be the same focal point when you cut to the next shot. And then characters can move around within each shot, or the camera can pan around, and the eye is led around through time and movement. 

With comics, you’ve got to create the illusion of time on a static canvas, through the use of space. You have to figure out how to break up into panels and find the best way to lead the eye through them. Film is very informative in composing the shots in the panels themselves, but getting those moments to work together to tell a story, that’s what defines comics. I work all this out at the layout stage, which would be the equivalent of storyboarding, I suppose. There are a lot of considerations that go into making a compelling page composition, both in form and function. Ways of guiding the eye. Subliminal, of course— you don’t want to be thinking about that while reading, that would defeat the whole purpose. There are many choices that have to be made on the way to delivering a story that are never seen by the reader except in their final, aggregate form. I try to make most of these choices in the layout stage, do most of the cerebral work there. It makes the rest of the process go much more smoothly. The hand can be more loose and playful while the brain is doing the heavy lifting, so once I’m at the inking stage my mind can rest or wander while my hand does its real work. This balances out my process, as it allows for more confidence in each of the stages. Confidence is essential in the creative process, so being conscious of it, cultivating it, and keeping an open channel for it running through from beginning to end is a good practice. That confidence— or lack thereof— always shows in the final product. That’s the energy captured in a piece, and ultimately, the transmission of conscious energy from one mind to another is the reason we have art.
Derik Hefner

Looking at your current project, there's a lot of esoteric themes, I imagine you have quite a library for reference. What kind of books do you have?

Grey Magick deals with themes relating to different belief systems. The human condition, the nature of consciousness and the mental structures we’ve built to harness and organize it. As well as the things that dwell outside those walls, the chaotic unconscious elements. I’ve had firsthand experience with a variety of belief sets... I was a devoted Christian in my early adult life, and I’m far from that now, but along the path I’ve taken deep dives into different strains of mysticism, examined some of the different magick systems, and have had personal experience with a few different types of cults. Grey Magick is my way of making sense of all this disparate pieces, by encapsulating the different views into characters and letting them interact through narrative. It’s a more interesting way to talk about it than a single point-of-view essay, and because some of the views expressed by a character might be a view I once held but have since discarded, I can at least give a fair voice to those views since I know what it feels like to hold them, and how they affect the rest of one’s thought processes. Some points of view discussed may not appear in a very favorable light, but I can at least be fair.
Grey Magik: Derik Hefner

Regarding things outside my own experience, I want to be fair to those too, so I’m a research junkie. Most of that happens on the internet— it’s a lot easier to gain access to things like ancient manuscripts and grimoires in digital form— so I generally have about 30 open tabs for quick reference. But I will always prefer physical books when possible, especially subjects of long-term interest. Joseph Campbell, Carl Jung, Israel Regardie, Grant Morrison; books on psychology, philosophy, anthropology, mythology, neurobiology. Books on the craft of writing, and a handful on the Enneagram, which I’m deeply fascinated by. I suppose the common denominator is the study of consciousness. 

And I’ve got lots of comics, graphic novels, and art books on hand for visual inspiration. Always.

What books are you currently reading?

I don’t have the same kind of time available for reading these days, so it’s a slower process, but right now I’m reading Campbell’s The Hero with a Thousand Faces (again) and Helen Palmer’s Enneagram, which I’ll follow up with Taking with the Left Hand by William Patrick Patterson, which is in part a reaction against Palmer and the Western approach to the Enneagram. It’s all about getting as many different perspectives as possible.

What music do you listen to while you are drawing?

I tend to do most of my writing and rough layouts in silence. As a musician it’s easy to get distracted by music, and it’s better to keep my entire mind on output mode in that stage since that’s where more of the decision making and mental work is done. Once I move to inks and color, that’s when I let in the music. Usually instrumental, but really anything I can get lost in. Lately I’ve been exploring a cluster of really moving instrumental bands like Meniscus, Totorro, Russian Circles, and Toe. Tool is always a great go-to for making art. Fear Inoculum got flak from some fans for not being aggressive enough, but listen to it on headphones while making art. You’ll get it.
Derik Hefner

I notice you sell Tees as well, do you judge the market and target it or do you create and just hope for the best?

When I do my own shirts (as opposed to commissioned designs), it’s usually pretty organic. I like to make prints of most of my illustrations, but there are some that just feel like they need to be on a shirt. The most recent line of shirts I’ve done are based on a horror icons series I did for Inktober 2019. My friend Steven Jones, a musician and a screenprinter, approached me about turning some of them into shirts, and it all fell into place. Steven is a master, his screens are so faithful to the original drawings down to details I never thought would translate. It’s been a great collaboration, and we’re about to do a new one this week, which I’m very excited about.
Derik Hefner

I also notice that you are pretty active in the artistic community with pages on Facebook, personally I find it important to inspire and feed others creatively. Is this something that you hope to continue and are you finding personal growth as an artist from these endeavors?

Absolutely! A strong artist community is something I was missing for a long time. I feel like we have that in Inkslingers, in ways I never could have expected when I booked that first show of 6 artists. I have been tremendously inspired by the artists there, and have made many dear friends through it. I’ve also recently started teaching a week-long comics art workshop in high schools. I just started in spring of 2019, and the pandemic cancelled this year’s classes so I’ve really only begun that journey and it’s already one of the most rewarding things I’ve ever done.

What would you tell someone that is just starting out, that's trying to create their own comic or artwork for that matter?

As a cartoonist or comics artist, your focus should be on storytelling above all else. Even if you are not the writer on a project or have no desire to write, you are a visual storyteller. To do that effectively, there is a lot of craft to be learned. But it’s all in service of story. Whatever your role in the process, learn about all the aspects of making comics. Writing, penciling, inking, coloring, lettering. Familiarity with the entire machine will enable you to be better at your part of it, whatever that is. It will help the entire team move more efficiently toward that greater goal of telling the story. 

Coming back to community, find every avenue you can to connect with other artists, no matter how far along you are on your path.

Most importantly: if you want to make comics... make comics. You don’t need permission from anyone to do that. But if you still feel like you do, there... I just gave it to you.
Inkslingers


MAKE COMICS.

What tools do you use primary when doing your work, especially your graphic novel. I take it that you are traditionally inking. I also like the way you use your palette, it seems to accentuate the inking, kind of old school...was that intentional?

I’ve actually been all digital for the past couple years. It took a while for digital tools to be on par with traditional tools, both in result and the feel of the tools, but the Apple Pencil for the iPad Pro changed the game. And since any comic or print you hold in your hand has to be digitized on its way to becoming a comic or print, it only makes sense. It cuts down on supply costs, and eliminates time-consuming steps like scanning and stitching together pieces of multiple scans. But aside from those kinds of steps, it’s been an aid in my growth as an artist. I can take greater risks with my inking, and be more bold than I would with a traditional brush, since clean-up is considerably easier. With traditional inking tools, there’s a little more inhibition, knowing that whatever you put down is permanent, unless you want to break out the white opaque paint and spend 20 minutes fixing it. No more accidental ink spills that make you have to start all over. Working with digital layers is life-changing when you come from traditional media.

It’s also helped me be more experimental with color. The interplay between the color and line art you mentioned is a result of that experimentation. I’ve adopted a pretty minimalistic coloring style, incorporating the color of the page into the highlights, which helps tie the palette together. This keeps the line art from getting lost. Just a little color will do a lot. For Grey Magick, I like to contrast a muted, neutral/earthtone palette with accents of bright, day-glo colors. It would be easy to fall into a cliché, starkly depressive palette for a witch punk book, but most things can be made more interesting by sprinkling in a dash of their opposite.

Below a couple of pages from Grey Magik

Derik Hefner: Grey Magik




Derik Herner: Grey Magik




Derik Hefner
Derik Hefner
Some of Derik's Famous Monster renditions:
Really enjoy the use of colors on both of these.


Derik Hefner



Too see more of Derik's work and projects check out Head Space.




If you like what I do and want to support it I have new Tees available on Teepublic

Or if you wish, you can support INK at Patreon.


Saturday, May 23, 2020

On Creative Detachment and Artist of the Month Returning


If you are anything like me, the current crisis has put us all into a fog that we seem to amble through, keeping our hands on whatever railings we can find less we stumble. It has even affected me creatively in some degrees, in other ways it also caused a lot of self-reflection.

Whatever the circumstances or fate that lies before us, I found I needed to tap into my creative energy again, if just to stay sane due to the steady barrage of noise coming from the media, protests and talking heads. A creative form of detachment so to speak.

I fully expected sales to tank during this time, a lot of us do not know where our next dollar is coming from and what dollars we do get goes to essentials. But I was pleasantly surprised to find that I have sold five shirts on Amazon.  Especially since Amazon is limited what they sell due to the crisis to what they consider essential. Most of my line of shirts, except for three, have been put on hold until things become stable. Fortunately I created a backup via Redbubble, which offers more than just Tees, but journals, masks, prints and more. Though I have only made one sale via Redbubble, I still have hopes for it. I have noticed that due to the crisis it is taking Redbubble longer to ship and being based in Australia I am sure that this is a factor as well.

 Redbubble Shop


I will be continuing to focus on the Redbubble shop. If you are interested in journals, and you have a dark sense of humor, visit the Things for the Library Collection that offers everything from journals for your cats to bookplates.  If you are interested in mask that you can either wear over your current medical mask or a simple face covering, these are the masks I have worked up. Now these masks are not medical grade masks, for the most part they are cosmetic. Alone they are like wearing a bandanna over your face, you can wear them over medical grade masks, which I would advise strongly.

 221B Baker Street
221B Baker Street Mask for Sherlock Holmes fans.

 221B Baker Street
221B Baker Street Mask for Sherlock Holmes fans.

 Miskatonic University
Miskatonic University Mask for Lovecraftians.

 Miskatonic University
Miskatonic University Mask for Lovecraftians.


 Machinations
Machinations Mask

 Machinations
Machinations Mask


The Hamsa Mechanica Mask


 Hamsa Mechanica
The Hamsa Mechanica Mask
Note: The Hamsa is an ancient ward against evil and the evil eye.

INK is still coming along and I am now inking Page 8. So begins the backstory of Agatha and Matilda. Also another important note, The Artist of the Month feature will return next month.



In the meantime, I am hoping everyone stays safe, makes sane choices and cultivates some creative detachment during this time.