A fine Wolverine-Freddie Mercury tribute by Anna Sahrling-Hamm. We like to think the bird is whistling “I Want it All.”
colleencoover:
Anna Sahrling-Hamm has stepped up to the challenge!
pointsforeffort:

I had to accept Collen Coover’s invitation to recreate this masterpiece. (There will be an inked version, eventually.)

 A fine Wolverine-Freddie Mercury tribute by Anna Sahrling-Hamm. We like to think the bird is whistling “I Want it All.”

colleencoover:

Anna Sahrling-Hamm has stepped up to the challenge!

pointsforeffort:

I had to accept Collen Coover’s invitation to recreate this masterpiece. (There will be an inked version, eventually.)

stevelieber:

Wally Wood’s 22 panels That Always Work have been passed around like cartoonist samizdat for decades now, and this is a good thing. But keep in mind, they aren’t a lesson in how to make good comics, they’re something to keep handy in case of emergency. The emergency in question is when a writer has handed you a non-visual script. (Read this letter from David Mamet to his writing staff for more about such things.)
Comics are a visual medium, and work best when they use pictures to advance and enrich the narrative. Sometimes a script doesn’t do that, but an artist still needs to communicate the impression that there is something dramatic taking place. Tv and film have  sound and movement to help accomplish this goal. In comics, we’ve got variations in gesture, lighting, and composition.
At six or seven panels a page, you can run through a lot of clever shots very quickly trying to keep the reader’s eye engaged. When you’re all out of good ideas, that’s when you need to break the glass and deploy some of Wood’s 22.

stevelieber:

Wally Wood’s 22 panels That Always Work have been passed around like cartoonist samizdat for decades now, and this is a good thing. But keep in mind, they aren’t a lesson in how to make good comics, they’re something to keep handy in case of emergency. The emergency in question is when a writer has handed you a non-visual script. (Read this letter from David Mamet to his writing staff for more about such things.)

Comics are a visual medium, and work best when they use pictures to advance and enrich the narrative. Sometimes a script doesn’t do that, but an artist still needs to communicate the impression that there is something dramatic taking place. Tv and film have sound and movement to help accomplish this goal. In comics, we’ve got variations in gesture, lighting, and composition.

At six or seven panels a page, you can run through a lot of clever shots very quickly trying to keep the reader’s eye engaged. When you’re all out of good ideas, that’s when you need to break the glass and deploy some of Wood’s 22.

Some dustinweaver art

From an upcoming comic.

Some dustinweaver art

From an upcoming comic.

S.H.I.E.L.D. Architects of Forever Illustration by Aaron McConnell.

S.H.I.E.L.D. Architects of Forever Illustration by Aaron McConnell.

Ron Randall’s Trekker by Aaron McConnell.  (Click the image to read the first chapter at TrekkerComic.com)

Ron Randall’s Trekker by Aaron McConnell.  (Click the image to read the first chapter at TrekkerComic.com)

dylanmeconis:

I drew a 23-page short story over the summer! It’s called Outfoxed, and you can read it all online, beginning this very minute. 
It was a very enjoyable departure for me - style, tone, length, all of it. I hope you enjoy it.

dylanmeconis:

I drew a 23-page short story over the summer! It’s called Outfoxed, and you can read it all online, beginning this very minute. 

It was a very enjoyable departure for me - style, tone, length, all of it. I hope you enjoy it.

comicpanels:

From S.H.I.E.L.D. v2 #2 by Hickman/Weaver.

comicpanels:

From S.H.I.E.L.D. v2 #2 by Hickman/Weaver.

tally-art:

9 new Between Gears pages!  That brings us to the end of May and leaves us with only 14 June days left…

tally-art:

9 new Between Gears pages!  That brings us to the end of May and leaves us with only 14 June days left…

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