Monday, June 4, 2012

CBLDF Auction

We at Snarked Towers are delighted to announce our involvement in this year's Comic Book Legal Defense Fund art auction and sketch card event (take a look at last year's event here)! The auction itself will be held at the San Diego Comic Con, and the sketch cards will be available from Mister Langridge at the Boom! Studios booth. Here's a sneak peek at the wee beastie, just to get your juices flowing!

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Preview of Snarked! #8

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Well, I do declare, McDunk - Snarked! # 8 is in the stores already! And, as it's the final part of our second volume, I exhort you to get thee down to that store without delay! All gone? Good.

What? What's that I spy? A few stragglers? No, no, no! This will never do! Why, if you need convincing, may I direct you to this spiffing preview of the aforementioned publication to whet your appetite to a fine edge!

What's that you say? No comic store near you? Fie! Poppycock! Why, it has never been easier to acquire Snarked! Simply order it direct from the publisher - or read the blessed thing upon your digital device of choice!

What's that, McDunk...? You can't read?

You... can't... read.

Sigh.

Just look at the pretty pictures then, McDunk... just look at the pretty pictures.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Snarked Volume 1 is out NOW!

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It's here! Calloo, callay! The first volume of our story is collected between two covers, collating issues #1-4 of Snarked! plus our preview issue - an ideal way to catch up with our adventures. It's in stores as of today, so don't miss out!

And if you don't live near a comic store, you can order it directly from our friends at Kaboom Studios here, or from the Amazon here (though what it's doing in a South American river is anyone's guess).

Friday, April 27, 2012

The Dodo is Dead!

Thank you for the entries to our latest sketch competition - we have a winner! I repeat, we have a winner! Mister Brad Walker will be the lucky recipient of an original sketch. Thank you all for joining in!

Brad's solution ran thus:

BIRD
BIND
BEND
BEAD
DEAD

Elegant, no? And much better than that layabout Langridge could manage. Congratulations all around!

Friday, April 6, 2012

And the nominations are...

It is with considerable pride and delight that I would like to report that our lovely comic book adventures have been nominated for a prestigious Eisner Award! Snarked! has been nominated in the "Best Publication for Kids" category, and a very fine place to be, I must say (although we all know that Snarked! is really for the parents as much as the kids... don't we?). At any rate, we here at Snarked Towers have all of our various appendages crossed in anticipation of the winners being announced in July. Do think happy thoughts for us, won't you?

Monday, March 5, 2012

We have a lucky winnah!

ImageIt gives me great pleasure to announce that our little competition to discover the secret message in Snarked! #4 has had a successful resolution! Thomas Childress and his wee bairns Allee and Emmy are to receive this delightful sketch, heading to them by Her Majesty's Royal Mail forthwith. And to anybody who missed the solution in Snarked! #5's letter column, the message can be found by taking the first letter on each page. Putting them all together, you get "Charles Lutwidge Dodgson" - the real name of Lewis Carroll. Huzzah!

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

It's... Big Norman!!

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 Well, glory be and ups-a-daisy! February already, and we're all at sea! Our adventures have kept me away from a computer keyboard for a few months, and those pesky carrier pigeons seem to keep getting lost on their way to each of your individual houses - probably caught and cooked by an itinerant Walrus or something, I shouldn't wonder.

In any case, you might like to see how Art Bum, Mister Roger Langridge, cobbled together the cover of our latest adventure, so without further ado...

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The first part of the process involves coming up with an idea. Mister Langridge scribbles a couple of doodles on the back of his shirt collar during one of his rare moments of lucidity and waggles them under the nose of Snarked!'s long-suffering editors, Messrs. Carlson and Harburn, who then promptly go to lunch and forget about them. Approximately three weeks later they'll find them beneath a pile of laundry and, forgetting their origins, will commission an entirely different artist to draw one of them. Mister Langridge is then forced to wrest the job from his rival's hands with unseemly force - at which point, the fun begins!

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Next  comes the part where the actual cover has to be drawn. By now Mister Langridge's shakes are somewhat advanced, so in order to make his job simpler, he takes his rough drawing and prints it out in a light shade of blue, the steam from his old wooden printer filling his shabby art studio with noxious fumes. Once this is done, Mister Langridge takes the blue-line drawing and, with the aid of a simple graphite pencil of the HB variety, works up his sketchy slashes into something a little more illustrative, while maintaining the integrity of the original composition. 

A word about the size: the original sketched doodles are slightly bigger than a postage stamp. Mister Langridge claims this helps him to think in terms of bold shapes and strong compositions, eliminating the temptation to give the rough drawings any unnecessary details. Personally, I think it's simple laziness. The pencil art, however, is drawn at a larger size - referred to as A4 throughout the world (21 x 29.7 cm), unless you're in America, where you have unique stationery standards unrecognised anywhere else, bless your hearts.

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 Once the pencil art is completed, it's really now just a matter of tracing and colouring in. The pencil art is normally scanned once more and blown up to an even larger size - A3 this time, twice A4 (29.7 x 42 cm) - and printed out in blueline again. (We at Snark Towers have spared you this redundant step in our graphic process reconstruction - we do appreciate you lead busy lives.) However, in this particular case, due to the fact that Mister Langridge did not have access to his usual A3 printer (some legal complication, methinks), a compromise was made, and this piece was printed out art the same size as the pencil art. Why he didn't merely ink over the pencil art is one of life's curious little mysteries which you'll just have to forbear.

Thenceforth, the drawing is inked, a process by which Mister Langridge takes a Number 2 sable brush with a bottle of indian ink  and traces the lines, adding a few finer ones here and there with the aid of a Hunt 102 nib. Once this is done, and Mister Langridge has scanned the drawing yet again, at which point, time being of the absolute essence, it is sent in the twinkling of an eye via the power of Her Majesty's Internet to the colourist, Matthew "Pudd'nhead" Wilson, at which point three or four weeks later he will return a version of said drawing which has been coloured by elves.

I trust this little window into the magic of the comic-making process has whiled away a few precious minutes of your lives you might otherwise have spent giving money to a homeless person, or kissing a child. In which case I feel my time has been well spent. Do let us know if you would like to see more of this sort of malarkey in the  future!