Must Read: Shaun Tan on ideas and art
Drop everything! Paul Gravett has interviewed Shaun Tan! The Oscar winning artist of The Arrival, The Lost Thing and many other picture books is one of the most admired illustrators working today, and although Tan's work often ends up being "comics" in that it is sequential, pictorial storytelling, as this interview makes clear, doing anything like comics is only something he backed into:
INTERVIEW: Val Staples explains life as a freelance colourist
After reading Bon Alimagno’s excellent interview/evaluation with colorist Erick Arciniega on iFanboy, I decided that it was time for more of us to start jumping on the coloring bandwagon. Getting the right colorist on a comic can be crucial to the success of the book, and yet there’s really very little coverage of this side of the industry available. With that in mind I contacted colorist-whizz (and nicest man alive) Val Staples, whose recent credits include books like Swamp Thing, New Mutants, Deadpool and Hulk, to get a basic insight into his life as a colorist.
Kick-Watcher: INTERVIEW with Gail Simone on LEAVING MEGALOPOLIS
Gail Simone and Jim Calafiore, the same team that brought you SECRET SIX, is bringing you LEAVING MEGALOPOLIS.
Kick-Watcher: Yeh's Route 66 Mural and Hotel Whiskey Tango
By: Henry Barajas
These Kickstarter projects are history in the making and it’s up to you to make it happen.
Project: Route 66 mural project at...
How to be a poor cartoonist from Brooklyn
Brooklyn is, despite the gentrification covering a huge swath of the entire borough, still home to a few people who don't shop at Kitsuné; and most of these urban poor seem to be cartoonists, which Brooklyn also has a huge population. The local website Brokelyn catches up with a few of them for survival tips. Brendan Leach, Leslie Stein and Lisa Hanawalt, (whose book on farts for children is excerpted above) give their recipes for ketchup soup and other practical hints:
The Kirkman/Bendis debates revisited: who's winning now?
Revisiting the debate over whether the Image model is as viable as the company model for creators to make a living.
SDCC 12: Mike Costa and Jon Armstrong have some Smoke and Mirrors
By Henry Barajas--
IDW was kind enough to invite me to a see a magic show at their booth at the San Diego Comic Convention as if there wasn’t enough magic in comic con. I have to admit I was a bit leary about attending a magic show. I’m very ignorant of the whole thing. I was afraid they were going to saw me in half and separate me from my nicely shaved legs. I got to the booth and I was greeted by the creators of Smoke and Mirrors, Mike Costa and Jon Armstrong. Jon is an award winning magician that has been performing internationally for over twenty years. Before we started the interview Jon was kind enough to do some card tricks.
Iron Man 3 surprises fans at SDCC 2012
While this year's San Diego Comic Con was lighter on movies and heavier on TV then it has been in recent years, the Iron...
SDCC: Scott Snyder Interview
Today I spoke with Scott Snyder by the DC Booth at San Diego Comic-Con. I got to talk with him about his work with Batman and how he's going to bring us the another big event with Greg Capullo and Death of the Family.
SDCC12: EXTRA! MTV To Live Stream Comic-Con Outside of the US!
MTV is streaming live video interviews from Comic-Con!
Kirkman, Millar, and Niles gab about the creator-owned world
CBR has a nice roundtable on creator-owned comics that rounds up Robert Kirkman, Mark Millar, and Steve Niles. Since they are all "strongly for" the piece doesn't really ignite any banter, but it does allow many long, entertaining manifestos. For instance, how Millar terrorized Alan Moore when he was a teen.
Book Con!: Librarians Interview Creators in Artists Alley in Anaheim!
An amazing assortment of artists and creators attended the American Library Association annual conference in Anaheim last month, and ALA interviewed twenty-five creators, posting the video to YouTube!













