Profile: Bret Taylor
October 15, 2008 by madBADcat
Filed under Digital Lifestyles, Profiles
Madbadcat’s Note: By his own admission, Brett Taylor is largely self-taught. I would tend to argue that, as artists, we are all "largely self-taught", exploring new territory each time we approach a subject. His passion for painting may come from finding TEXTURE as a new addition to his visual vocabulary. Chek out the texture on this closeup of one of his paintings.
Profile: Jaye Frisina
October 8, 2008 by madBADcat
Filed under Panels & Gutters & Zip Ribbons, Profiles
Madbadcat’s Note: The first time I saw Jaye Frisina’s work, I laughed out loud. How is it possible for that whimsical ninja to be endearing and threatening at the same time? The answer to that question is probably the essence of Ms. Frisina’s talent.
::: Artist(s) Name:::
Jaye Frisina
::: Title of Work(s:::
FIN cartoons, and Thirteenth Story zines
::: Publisher:::
Self-published
::: Website:::
ThirteenthStory.com
The Tao of Workflow
September 29, 2008 by Aikido Al
Filed under Panels & Gutters & Zip Ribbons, Sequential Art, Workflow
Like most webcomics on their first year, The Tao of I.T. Al has changed over the months, as the workflow has been changed and refined.
Originally I had followed the current "traditional" comics art route with pencils and inked work done with actual graphite, ink and paper. These were then scanned, cleaned up, and then painted digitally. Now I work entirely digitally using Corel’s Painter for pencils and Adobe Illustrator for inking and coloring. Some backgrounds are hand drawn, but I primarily rely on a growing library of scratch-made resources made in Illustrator. Workflow is important to me because it the more it speeds up the processes, the more time I can spend drawing!
October’s batch of Al is done, and he’s back in action. Much of the recent material has been concentrating on the supporting characters, but Al has reasserted himself recently. It’s good to draw him in full martial arts mode. And it comes out so easily. It’s rather odd that one of my major skills is to draw a large armadillo in a hakama! The hakama, sometimes known as "samurai pants", is a very elegant traditional garment worn by aikido, kendo, kenjitsu, iado, and Japanese archery practitioners. Back when I was practicing aikido, I thought it made my technique look ten times better than it did. Read more





