The chapter breaks in the Paris book look like this. I hadn't established the exterior of Deborah and Billy's home, so took the opportunity to do so here.
The chapter breaks in the Paris book look like this. I hadn't established the exterior of Deborah and Billy's home, so took the opportunity to do so here.
This is a new t-shirt design based on the cover of Vapid, a mini comic Ian Lynam wrote and I drew, back in '95. Should any American friends wanna read it, it was reprinted in 'Punk Strips', available to buy from Wow Cool!
Paulette from Paris, steadfastly refusing to sit in a chair. Chairs are for squares.
I was privileged to spend last weekend in the fine company of Ian Lynam and his nephew Evan, visiting from Japan and the US respectively. Ian and I have been long-distance friends since way back and have produced a number of comics together.
Here's the back cover of the new Subhumans LP. It's in the classic cut 'n' paste style, albeit a computer-generated version. As soon as you drop in Dick's handwriting it starts looking like a Subs record - I want this one to sit well with the rest o' my collection! His writing must be punk's most recognisable, along with Aaron Cometbus.
This is the front cover for the soon to be released Subhumans LP/CD. I drew/cut/assembled a rough version that the band and I decided to stick with, as it had a spontaneity a more labored drawing might lack. Mind you, I did spend some time applying textured edges (scanned torn paper) to much of it, including vocalist Dick's hand-written title.
It's also going on t-shirts for their forthcoming US tour, so if you're in the States go see 'em.

A double page illustration for a guitar mag from a few years ago, for a feature on Punkvoter. The spaces were for titles and so on. I post it now because the Metal Hammer pic reminds me that it wasn't my first flag-hoisting commission based on an existing artwork! That one was their idea, this one was mine and it's of course after Liberty Guiding The People by Delacroix.
More from The Shadow Over Innsmouth. Even though there was a lot to cram into the 36 page adaptation, scripter Alex managed to pen some wordless sequences. I don't think it did my nib any favours, mind.
Obed Marsh, the Bluto/Haddock sailor dude below, appears in a few flashback panels. Originally I gave him tattooed knuckles that read "love" and "hake", but unlike here, it really wasn't the time or place for crap puns.


Here are the first three pages from the adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, drawn quickly and with less pencilling than is usual for me. The value of this method is that if someone says "These pages are shit", you can reply "Yeah, but the pencils were very loose, what did you expect?"
On page 2 I used the close-up of the book that describes Innsmouth's former prosperity to conceal and then reveal it's decay 'now'. When I remembered to do so I tilted the panels at alternate angles to reflect the queasiness of the tale and all the ocean stuff. I didn't do that all the time, that would have been tedious and annoying. The spiral is an on-going motif for various reasons, so it's utilised in everything from folds in cloth to lamp posts. Sound effects are handy for giving a story beats, and they're aesthetically pleasing too, especially when drawn as part of the art. I've noticed them being used less frequently in some mainstream comics for some reason. It seems a shame not to make the most of story-telling devices unique to the medium.

