Monday 31 May 2010

Night Draws In.

Hello there. I've been doing some drawing again, so I thought I'd share. The first 2 are basically copying Jason Shawn Alexander, an amazing comic book artist whose work i love, the 2 of the girl are from a Vogue shoot with Pixie Geldof, and the one of The Escapist and Luna Moth hugging is from The Escapists! graphic novel. I'm playing around with my new watercolours and inks, so far nothing too spectacular, but i'm happy enough. Tell me what you think.






Saturday 29 May 2010

I promise i'll never be your friend

This made me laugh a lot. I'm not sure if you have to be a Wes Anderson fan to really get it or if it's funny off its own back. I'm a massive Wes fan and it had me in stitches. Anyway, something to brighten up your Saturday in case it was as rainy and miserable as mine:



I've been doing some drawings today. I'll put up any I'm happy with as soon as I'm done, probably later tonight.
See you then.

Friday 21 May 2010

so long as there is suffering, there should also be baby elephants.

Wow, it's been a while. How are you all?
This is just a little mini-baby post because i'm bored and felt bad for not writing anything for ages. I'm reading McSweeney's issue 33, which is a newspaper and completely wonderful. It's called the San Francisco Panorama and it has all that McSweeny's goodness, but my favourite part is the Panorama Book Review, which is a supplement magazine and is full of book reviews and little stories and quatrains as filler.

I thought i would share with you a very short story from it, because it makes me laugh.


Witness Protection Bridge, a very short story by Dicky Murphy.

When incriminating evidence was found at the base of the Brooklyn Bridge, essentially deep-sixing New York's most powerful crime family, the authorities knew they had a serious problem on their hands. It was one thing to put a rat fink and his family into witness protection. They did it all the time, and it worked. But how would they save the Brooklyn Bridge from the reprisals that were surely in store?
It was the world's most famous bridge. People knew where it lived.
After the Army Corps of Engineers sadly submitted that they couldn't move the now terrified bridge without serious damage, Blank Foster, the head of the FBI. said they'd just do the next best thing. Thus, the following morning, the Brooklyn Bridge was gone. In its place stood a nearly identical bridge, except this one was called the Runyon Bridge, and it was adorned with two additional American flags.
To this day, some still speculate (the indicted mobsters included) that this Runyon Bridge is, in fact, just the Brooklyn Bridge all dolled up like a big old baby.


Wasn't that nice? I hope you enjoyed it.
I'll write more soon, I promise.