
I did the cover illustration for I Love Bad Movies #2, a great zine writing about movies that you probably have seen, but don’t remember seeing. Get it on Etsy.

I did the cover illustration for I Love Bad Movies #2, a great zine writing about movies that you probably have seen, but don’t remember seeing. Get it on Etsy.

Just got notification that Print magazine has chosen one of my CODA skate decks for the next Regional Design Annual. Couldn’t be more proud since Print does the best design annual and my decks have a soft spot in my heart.
I’ve been doing the Rare Words blog now for only about 2 months and in that time have done about 50 drawings. The response has been fantastic and it’s become the collaboration I had been hoping it would. I thought I would show a bit of the process behind one of my favorite submissions.
Trisha Alaniz submitted the phrase “relatively unscathed.” I begin each drawing in my sketchbook doing very small, loose thumbnails. If I find myself laboring over a drawing, a move onto the next one and will revisit it later. My first thoughts were to show some bodily harm that leaves the person still functioning (as you see from the 1 legged guy and the other split in half), but then the idea of a natural occurrence like a downed tree popped into my head driving home. Those doodles were done while driving and not looking down at the page!

I then pencil (again very loosely) onto a sheet of 9 x 12 watercolor paper. I knew I was going to ink this with a brush so I wanted the soft edges and dry brush effect that watercolor paper can give.

I scan the page in without erasing the pencils and as a grayscale image to retain the uneven blacks in the drawing. With all of the drawings, it’s been a goal to not be too precious with each drawing and to act on first instincts. While each drawing is colored in Photoshop, I used only flat colors and no textures that were not present in the drawing to begin with (ie. no fake backgrounds, gradients, etc.). I love the muted color palette in the finished piece.


This is a detail from my new skateboard deck for Coda. I can’t show the whole thing yet, but rest assured, it contains a whole lot more members of the zombie army.
I think this marks my first zombie drawing. I’ve been trying to think where this idea came from because I’m not usually one to draw the undead or monsters in general. I’ve been re-reading the old Swamp Thing comic from the late eighties and have been enjoying the monster melodrama that series is packed with.
I just received word that my Handmaze print was chosen for the Society of Illustrators 51st Annual Exhibition. The print will be on display in the Society’s gallery in NYC in the March of 2009.
The print is 2 colors silkscreened on cover weight Starch Mint French paper in an edition of 50. Signed and numbered. They’re in the shop.