

... and a few from The Adventure of The Engineer's Thumb, published in their Conan Doyle book.
Anyway, I was thinking that there are numerous parallels between this yarn and Hergé's The Black Island. Both feature a murderous and mysterious German dude residing in a mansion in the Southern English countryside, a mansion that proves rather tricky to leave but that ends up burning down, both are engaged in counterfeiting, both...
Two pages from Vinyl Underground issue 8, expertly inked and coloured by Ryan Kelly and Guy Major respectively. Primrose Hill and the Aquarium. Behind the latter is some Dali museum or something, but I decided to go with a different artist, as readers of Paris might note ;)

I got my Graphic Classics: Special Edition comps today and they're lovely. They'll be available from your local comic shop on Free Comic Book Day, though it'd be worth pre-ordering one. A few panels from my contribution to it above and a discarded version of one below.

Today I drew this.
Leah from Vinyl Underground in her undies, surrounded by lilies. Well, how do *you* surf the net?
Here's my take on Picasso's numerous portraits of Sylvette David, with my apologies to both - it's only for fun. It wasn't supposed to be her at first - having drawn the face, figure and clothes I was just stuck for "good hair" and her famous ponytail popped into my head. From there I felt I should add some Picasso-esque ceramics given that they met in Vallauris, the lovely town in which he made his pottery. Sylvette is an artist herself.
I was too quick to scan this in and didn't realise I was unhappy with it until it was on screen. Originally she was bare-skinned under her dress, but it didn't really give her the confident sorta look I was after, it just looked crude. So I doctored her wardrobe on the computer and didn't bother drawing the background I had in mind. Still, at least we get to spend this time together, reader!
Some recent reviews:
Been admiring Cameron's inks and Guy's colours on Vinyl Underground 5, in stores at the start of February.

I'm not good at maintaining a sketchbook, but wish I was. Those hardcovers are intimidating. I'll doodle on A4 sheets of printer paper though, fill them up and then scrunch them up. I broke that last rule to scan and post these from yesterday evening. Ideally having them online will force me to improve - to search more whilst drawing - rather than absent-mindedly regurgitating the same generic faces and poses!

I was recently asked to draw Subvertman's better half and as it was being supplied digitally added some half-tones. Hadn't drawn her since '95. The Subvertman comics were collected in Punk Strips, which if you're Stateside and into punk rock, is available to buy from Marc Arsenault's Wow Cool. Marc has a cool blog there too.