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Thom Zahler Art Studios

Art With an Attitude

  • LOVE AND CAPES: HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS
  • Works
  • THOM'S BLOG
  • The Legend of Thom Zahler
  • Conventioneering
  • Art For Your Eyes
  • Thom Zahler Store
  • Newsletter
  • Patreon
  • PRE-ORDER A COMMISSION
  • Threadless Store
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Facebook

My Weekend at Alter Ego Comics

This past weekend, Marc Bowker invited me to his store, Alter Ego Comics, in Lima, Ohio. I've done a few events for Marc, and they are uniformly excellent. They're a lot of fun, Marc's staff is delightful and they all take care of me. If you're a creator and you get the chance to do something at Marc's store, jump at the chance! (Marc also has an unerring ability to find great places to eat, too.) Saturday's event included a screening of my Ultimate Spider-Man: Web Warriors episode, a Q and A afterwards, and lots of signing and sketching afterwards. Lots of people came by and I had a wonderful time meeting and chatting with everyone.

Photos are courtesy of the Underground Video Network, who also interviewed me. The interview is linked here, too.

categories: Comic Book, General, good times---good times, Hotsheet, Long Distance, Love and Capes, Randomness
Tuesday 02.09.16
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

Cartooning Summer Camp Wrap-Up

So, sometimes I teach. It’s not in a credentialed capacity. I teach an afterschool program at Hawken Lower School, and then for the last few years I teach a week of cartooning at summer camp.

I don’t think I could teach regularly. I sometimes come off as having a lot of patience, but some of that is just storing it up all year to use it for that one week.

This was the biggest class I’ve had yet. I started out with eleven and then gained another two that transferred from the cupcake class. Five girls, eight boys total. They were also the best class I’ve had yet.

On a side note, I love that the girls in my class all asked for superheroes when I drew their end-of-class sketchcards. And when they got to name their Pictionary team, they named it “Hydra”. I love any time I see that gender line in comics coming down

Some of the kids have taken my classes for years. One of them actually graduated from taking my classes to being my teaching assistant. That’s the kind of thing that makes you realize you’re not just teaching some cartooning stuff to kill some time, but you’re actually becoming part of the fabric of their lives. I don’t think I’m a great teacher in any way, but when they keep taking my class, I know there’s something that they’re responding to.

We played dodgeball at recess every day. Everyone played and it was great. And we drew a ton. Basic stuff, advanced stuff. And, like I said above, we even played Pictionary.

Here’s the thing: It’s an honor to be part of these young people’s lives. Some of them I’ve been with for two years or more. And when we wrapped up, and Jake headed off to move to California and Riley to Australia and Eliza asked if she could be my assistant next year… look, I’m an easy touch. I cry my Dean Winchester tears all the time. But I wasn’t expecting this to affect me as much as it did. And it did.

If you’ve got a skill, like drawing, you owe it to pass it on. You’re a link in the chain and it shouldn’t stop with you. Teaching forces you to articulate and clarify what you think you know. Some of their questions make you better, too. You get as much as they do.

I’m so glad I said “yes” the first time I was asked to teach there. It was outside my comfort zone, but I’m so happy I went there.

categories: Cartooning, General, good times---good times, gooutandmakesomething, Hotsheet, Randomness
Wednesday 08.19.15
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

Small Business Saturday Sale

I'm running a Small Business Saturday sale, all the way through Cyber Monday. You can check it out here!

categories: Commissions, Drawing Table, General, gooutandmakesomething, Hotsheet, Press Releases, Randomness
Saturday 11.29.14
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

My Regular Con Carry

concarry_let.jpg

Following up on our discussion on the last episode of Comics Assembled (Wait, you're not listening to Brian Ward and me talk about the business of comics every week? Shame on you! Check it out here right now.) I thought I would post my regular Con Carry. All of this lives in my Brenthaven shoulder bag so that I don't have to worry about remembering it. It's always stocked with these things, which are duplicates or travel versions of things I have in my studio. Buying two things is sometimes much easier than remembering to bring one.

Read on to see what I bring with me to shows.

Read more

tags: gooutandmakesomething, testtag
categories: Conventions, General, gooutandmakesomething, Hotsheet, Randomness, Recommend
Monday 09.22.14
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

Your Guardians of the Galaxy

As part of my continuing sketch warm-up/Manga Studio expanding process, I decided to draw the Guardians of the Galaxy… the original Guardians. Well, the 70s versions that I remember. So Starhawk, Yondu, Vance Astro, Charlie-27, Martinex and Nikki. I also tried to expand my drawing techniques in Manga Studio. I tried a few more things with guides and rules, especially on the Charlie-27 rivets on his uniform. I also did a couple of things as separate layers, such as the brush-like highlights on Starhawk which I could just change the color of in Photoshop. I also had a lot of fun figuring out the fastest way to do Martinex's look.

I kept the characters close to their Bronze Age incarnations. I wasn't looking to re-invent them, though I did tweak some gloves and other accessories to help delineate each character.

And want some Bronze Age fun? Check out the first Guardians collection on Amazon or Comixology.

categories: Cartooning, Drawing Table, General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes, Randomness
Monday 08.18.14
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

Kickstarter Bonus: Up and Muppets Pitches

I promised that if I made $5200, I'd post my pitch documents for Up and Muppets. I cleared that by $6.29, and I'm a man of my word. There are two Up pitches here, Up: Down Under and a second one, getting into the source of the talking dog collars. Up: Down Under was the clear winner, but Disney had some changes. I made those changes and it became Up: Special Delivery. Honestly, I think it's better than the original pitch (as much as I love the heck out of the original title).

There are also three Muppets pitches. Boom was doing the Muppet Show, as well as the Muppet adaptation series. These were for the first. I did pitch the latter, including an awesome (and rejected) pitch of The Muppets: Hamlet where Miss Piggy plays Ophelia and, upon finding out she dies in Act IV, goes about rewriting the play Duck Amuck style so that she becomes the hero. Yeah, I found a way to give Hamlet a happy ending.

The three Show pitches were to have them become the House act at a Donald Trump-esque casino, to have them become a reality show where someone got voted off every issue, and one where a big star (a la Tom Cruise circa the couch jumping era) becomes their guest host.

If the stars ever align, I'd love to do any or all of these. But for now, you can enjoy them in this PDF.

categories: General, good times---good times, Hotsheet, Love and Capes, Randomness
Saturday 03.24.12
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

Memories of the Future

Wil Wheaton and I have a hate/hate relationship.

He and I have a lot in common. We’re about the same age. We both have brown hair and brown eyes. We’re both ruggedly handsome. And, in 1987, while Wil was the youngest member of the Starship Enterprise on Star Trek: The Next Generation, I was the youngest member of the Starship New Promise, a Star Trek fan club.

Oh, and we both seemed to wear a lot of sweaters.

So it’s no surprise that my friends in the Trek group teased me by calling me “Wesley” and I grew to really hate that character.

There’s a thing that happens with actors and their parts. You know the actor is only playing a character, but since that character is all you have to go on, you do blur the two of them. So, my disdain for Wesley was transferred to Wil.

Wil and I grew up. Wesley got a real promotion and eventually left the show. But I always associated some of that Wesley Ick with Wil.

 

Then, a few years back, I found Wil’s blog. It’s why I tell you about how I felt towards Wesley and the actor who played him. I had a fair amount of irrational predisposition to dislike the blog.

What I found there was an surprisingly honest accounting of being a creative person. He wrote about the difficulties of writing, what he had to do to bring a character to life. I’m stupid for behinds the scenes stuff, and he was delivering it gangbusters. It wasn’t long before, solely through the strength of his writing, that he won me over completely.

So now he’s written a book. Another book, as he’s written a few. This one is called Memories of the Future, and it’s his recapping of the first half of the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Hmmm, more behind the scenes stuff. Wonder if Im going to like it.

He’s described his book as “looking through a yearbook and saying ‘Oh my God, can you believe we thought that was cool?’” That’s a pretty accurate description of the book’s vibe. It’s irreverent fun.

I’m a big Star Trek fan. There are parts of that show that have actually defined my life. I once turned down a big job by quoting Kirk in Generations when he told Picard to not do anything that got him out of That Chair. As such, I’m sensitive about people hacking on the franchise too much. (Except for Voyager and the first three seasons of Enterprise, but that’s another story.)

It’s very much “nobody picks on my brother but me.” Wil’s part of Trek, so he can deconstruct some of the early season missteps and do it without malice. The books a lot of fun, and I’m not sure anyone else could have written it.

Wil’s writing style is breezy in the best possible way. Each chapter is candy coated with humor over a solid center of content, and you wind up wolfing it down. Yeah, it’s literary Twix. And eI recommend it.

Here’s the thing that really impressed me, and why I’ve decided to devote a chunk of blog real estate to the former Sweatered One and his book. Wesley was pretty reviled, and Wil could have taken the tack of I read the lame lines I was given as best as I could, dudes, so deal, and he’d be more than justified in doing it. But he takes it a step further and shows, from a writerly point of view, why the character was so unsuccessful.

That shows a pretty impressive intellectual honesty.

The first volume takes covers Encounter at Farpoint to Datalore. He breaks down each episode with a funny recap, some insider’s memories, and a criticism of the episode itself. If you like Star Trek: The Next Generation or behind-the-scenes process stuff, I recommend it completely.

Like I said, I have a hate/hate relationship with Wil Wheaton. When I was younger, I hated the character he played and the teasing I got from it. Now, he’s been on Big Bang Theory, hangs with Felicia Day, and has a family that liberally quotes Monty Python.

So now I just hate him because I’m jealous.

tags: star trek, star trek the next generation, wil wheaton
categories: General, good times---good times, Hotsheet, Love and Capes, Randomness, Recommend
Wednesday 11.18.09
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

That's Why they Call It the Blues

Let's take a break for a little process stuff.

With this issue of Love and Capes, I've started using a Col-Erase pencil to do my layouts. These are colored pencils that are far less waxy and more erasable than the more prevalent Prismacolor pencil. Prismacolor's a fine product, but it's the right tool for the right job.

I'd heard a bunch of my artist friends talk about these pencils, but it wasn't until the inordinately kind Yves Ambrun gave me one to mess around with at New York Comic-Con that I fell in love with it. I found some at Pearl during my Los Angeles trip and have been using them this issue.

The advantage is this: Previously, I'd go through three pieces of tracing paper to make a page of Love and Capes. There would be some really rough pencils, a second more structured drawing, and then the third tight pencils, from which I'd ink the page. But now, I can combine steps one and two into one page. The colored pencils allow me to do a second pass with my standard lead mechanical pencil. I can use the blue as an underdrawing without having to have like colored lines compete.

Look, real artwork

I think it's keeping a lot more of the energy to my artwork, too. Roughs always have more pop than the tighter pencils, and trying to keep as much of that intact is one of the constant battles of the cartoonist.

Plus, I think the rough pencils look cool this way, too. Like a lot of animation drawings I've seen.

categories: Drawing Table, General, Hotsheet, Love and Capes, Randomness
Tuesday 08.25.09
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

New Review for You, Crew!

Johanna Draper Carlson at Comics Worth Reading gave Love and Capes #9 another great review. Here's a smackerel of her review.

I am running out of ways to say how much I enjoy reading this superhero sitcom.

You can read the full review here.

tags: comics worth reading, johanna draper carlson, Love and Capes, reviews
categories: General, good times---good times, Hotsheet, Love and Capes, Press Releases, Randomness
Sunday 03.29.09
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 

Drobo Domo

I'm a huge fan of MacBreakWeekly. (Hey, there's a new episode recording tomorrow. Yay!) It's not just a good show for those of us Of The Mac, but it's also a good show because it's a good show with great commentators.

I've done little things before about them, too. Mark wears a TWiT sweatshirt in Love and Capes #2, and Charlotte drinks out of a MacBreakWeekly coffee mug in issue #4. I've even included Andy Ihnatko as a background character in the just-posted page one of the new issue. But I think I've hit a new level here.

Scott Bourne, photography and backup guy, has been raving about the Drobo. I think he's right to. As a backup nut myself, since my Big Crash of 2006, I really need to get one sometime this year since they make backing up so easy. Because of that, my brain just clicked a certain way and I started imagining a comic strip with Scott and his Drobo. I went ahead and did a couple of strips to get them out of my head and sent them to Scott, who liked them muchly. He's even called me out on Twitter for it, which I appreciate.

So, especially if you're a MBW fan, here's a sample strip, with links to the other two I did.

Feelin' Drooby

Strip 1
Strip 2
Strip 3

tags: andy ihnatko, Drobo, drooby, Love and Capes, macbreak weekly, relentless self-promotion, Scott Bourne
categories: Cartooning, Drawing Table, General, good times---good times, Hotsheet, Love and Capes, Randomness, Recommend
Monday 03.23.09
Posted by Thomas Zahler
 
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