Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Webs and Shreds (and Thunder!): Three More Recent Drawings

Here are some more commission-like drawing (they're like what I would do for a convention or commission drawing, but these aren't sold yet!). The first is a Spidey pose traced from a 2005 sketchbook drawing I always liked, with the addition of a goofy Hulk figure. It's 11" x 14" on Aquabee sketchbook paper, colorized in Photoshop (although I could accomplish much the same effect physically with Dr. Martin's dyes).



Next is Venus (I call her Victory Venus, for the War Effort) and Thunder Girl, two characters from Gary Carlson and Chris Ecker's ong-running Big Bang universe of retro comics. I actually inked an Ultiman story for them, but I've never drawn either of these two characters. (This drawing was the basis of my "Inking the Old School Way" demonstration at Wizard World Pittsburgh, July 28, 2019).


Finally, another Spidey pose, also from an old sketchbook gesture that I lightboxed onto Aquabee and inked up. All of these drawings are 11" x 14" and inked with India ink and a Hunt #102 crowquill pen (there's a bit of brush on the Hulk, above).


Check out my Commission Price List if you would like a personal Don Simpson drawing! See elsewhere on my blogs for the range of characters (including my own) that I draw.
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Read my YA prose experiment Ms. Megaton Man Maxi-Series! New chapter every Friday!

Sunday, July 28, 2019

A Signal, Two Girls, and Three Recent Ink Drawings!

I had some time to use India ink at Wizard World Pittsburgh July 26-28, 2019, something I haven't done in many years, and produced three fairly nice ink drawings, all on 11" x 14" Aquabee sketchbook paper, with a Hunt #102 "crowquill" pen.


The first is Spider-Man caught unawares by the Spider-Signal beamed into the night sky over New York City. Who even knew there was a Spider-Signal?


The second is Big Bang Comics' Thunder-Girl and EC Comics Moon Girl (immortalized in All in Color for a Dime because her title morphed into A Moon, A Girl...Romance! when superheroes died out and romance comics became the hot commodity). Both characters, incidentally, where created by Shelly Moldoff, nearly fifty years apart.


Finally, there's Wooverine, a character that first appeared in slightly different form in Megaton Man #8 (February 1986). The first one was rather stocky, like a bulldog. This one more literally follows the Megaton Man template.

I did both a penciling and inking demo at the show, and I still have a couple other drawings I worked on that I will post somewhere soon.
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Read my YA prose experiment Ms. Megaton Maxi-Series! New chapter every Friday!

Monday, July 22, 2019

Spidey Stampede: A Decades-Delayed Office Dash!

This is a drawing I just completed in pen and ink on 11" x 14" Aquabee sketchbook paper (nice stuff that takes pen and ink really well; it's almost like Bristol board). I had this pad for ages and decided to cut the spiral-wire binding and use it for warm-up drawings and convention sketches.




What's interesting about this drawing is that it's based on an old sketchbook sketch of Spider-Man that, I'm guessing, was drawn circa 1998 or so. I never used to date my sketches--I kept a sketchbook mainly for anatomical studies and warm-up exercises; I was being published on a regular basis in those days so there was no need to keep track of exactly when I drew something--publication dates would have sufficed. Anyway, the original Spidey figure here was probably no more than four or five inches tall; it was roughly penciled and inked over with a brush.



This sketch, I should mention, may have been a study in preparation for pitching some samples to Marvel, but it may have been just a relaxing study. I used to draw Spider-Man more than any other character before I turned professional - we're talking a lot of webs drawn during a lot of indoor recesses in fourth grade.

I've written about this before on various blogs, but around 2012, as my graduate studies neared completion, I began going through old sketchbooks and scanning figures such as this to see if I could salvage them. There was no commercial incentive for this; I just wanted to see if I could ink some old sketches and turn them into finished drawings. A number of drawing of Clarissa James (Ms. Megaton Man) seemed to lend themselves to this process, and yielded good results. I've inked dozens of figures of her, Megaton Man, and other characters and you can find the results on my various blogs. I've found that this only works with sketches dating back to about 1989--before that, my drawing style is just too different to make it worthwhile.

This particular pose of Spidey has long been on my list, so I finally traced it and inked it yesterday and today. I added some stock office workers (the desktop computer has been updated; the original sketch indicated an old CTR monitor), and voila, a pretty nice result. I'm thinking this desire to salvage figures from old sketchbooks has pretty much run its course--although I've developed an obsession with finishing everything I start that has gotten so bad, I'm actually finishing off old, discarded big-company sample pages and even Megaton Man rejects!

More recently, I have a stockpile of tight pencil drawings (my penciling has gotten tighter in recent years simply because I'm never sure when I'll be able to sit back down to complete a given drawing or project, and I don't want to have to go through the kind effort and guessing an old sketch like the above requires. Most drawing now are inked either immediately or at least within recent memory.

Stay tuned for more posts from the Ol' Drawing Board!
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Read my YA prose experiment The Ms. Megaton Man Maxi-Series - new chapter every Friday!


Monday, July 15, 2019

Patriotic Pen and Ink: An Orphaned Commission!

Perhaps it's all the deep divisions right now in this great land of ours, or (more likely) my own perverse prankishness, but when a collector contacted me about doing a commission over the weekend with instructions that he wanted me to be me, this is the idea I woke up with this morning. So, I let 'er rip. Unfortunately, at the pencil stage (below), said collector balked, informing me that he was "really not a Marvel fan." Okay. So I went ahead and inked it anyway.

Pen and India ink on Strathmore 400 Drawing paper, 14" x 17".

Because of its patriotic theme (and more than a little suggestiveness), I expect this orphaned commission drawing won't stay orphaned for long. If you would like to adopt it, or have something else you'd like me to draw, please consult my convention sketch and commission price list page, and contact me! Thanks, as always, for your support.

Blue and graphite pencil on Strathmore 400 Drawing paper, 14" x 17".

PS: Don't worry, I'm doing Batman and Catwoman for said collector instead!
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Read my YA experiment Ms. Megaton Man Maxi-Series! New prose chapter every Friday!