Sunday, January 6, 2013

Color, Part 1: The Basics


Constanec-Prepress-web
So, I want to talk with you today about color. If I have time I’ll get into the knitty-gritty of our process here but first I am going to start with the basics.
Color is light. You may remember a high school science class where you learned that the color that an object appears to be is that way because the objects surface is reflecting only that color of light. Let’s take an apple, a juicy red apple, as an example. The light that strikes the surface of the apple contains every color in it. The cells that make up the skin of the apple contain pigments that absorb every color of the light spectrum except red. So, the light that reflects off the apple is only red giving the apple it’s red appearance. Different colored apples simply have different pigments in their skins which absorb different sets of colors.
Did you notice the word pigment in that paragraph above? What that paragraph just described is called subtractive color. All pigments work on this principle; oil based paint, watercolor paint, Copic markers, printer toner, and the dyes used on cloth. They all create the color we see by absorbing, or subtracting, all of the other colors that occur in light. But, what about a computer monitor? You know the thing you are looking at right now?
A computer monitor, actually every monitor, works by shooting white light through a grid of red, blue, and green pixels. I’m going to give you the logical explanation for how displays work, not the physical. Each pixel in an LCD actually contains all three colors but we’re talking about color not LCD design. So, if the only colors a monitor can make are green, blue, and red, how do you get yellow? Or any other color that isn’t green, blue, or red, for that matter? Easy, the display makes yellow by shooting a bean of white light through the green and blue pixel at the same time. And, the brightness, or strength if you want to think of it that way, of the white light determines whether we see a dark green or a neon green. This is called additive color.
Now, here’s where things get interesting (read very difficult). Angela makes a beautiful watercolor painting of her autobio character eating her own entrails and she wants me to digitize it so every one on the web can see it. She also wants me to prepare it for print so we can sell a big poster of it.
The original art work uses pigments so the colors are subtractive and the pigments are analog so they have perfect smooth and continuous transitions from color to color and shade to shade. The digitizing process captures the reflected light from the art work and it does it digitally which introduces a bunch of complications that I will be getting into in my next article.
How’s that for a tease!
Constance

Thursday, January 3, 2013

2012 looking ahead


This  year we hope to be as productive as this last year.
We plan to do more comic conventions, most likely even attending the same conventions as last year.
Angela hopes to complete a longer comic – but is having a hard time deciding which one to focus on. There is a new white board covered in comic ideas. No less than 16(!) story ideas from Angela alone. First she needs to complete the three short comics she started last year.
Also, we are planning to update this blog twice a month. Maybe not a regular schedule, but twice a month as we can. More if we can think of things. We already have two for January! Way to go!
Because Abe is learning so much at school, we will likely also have more exciting plans. For example, The Saddest Sasquatch may become a beautiful large poster and maybe even a t-shirt. He is learning lots of exciting things and we will try to apply his school projects to Flying Dodo ideas.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

2012 in review


Happy New Year! Well, it was a slower year in 2012 than in 2011 for the crew of Flying Dodo Publications. We only printed three comics, but we have an additional 2 in anthologies.
  • Bubbles and Other Tales – originally in Bureau of Drawers Volume B (PDF); expanded in Bubbles and Other Tales online and in print.
  • Tightie-Whities and Their Men – small printed book of sketches
  • An Extensive and Practical Guide to Protecting Your Chickens from Coyotes – print only (so far)
  • Corner of Imagination – Bureau of Drawers Volume C (PDF); we will make a book of this short comic soon.
  • Tardigrade – Science: Fact and Fiction published by Stumptown Underground
    preview
Unfortunately we had a few failed comics, but they are still in progress. We have not forgotten about The Autovoyuerist, but that one just falls apart more and more. Not only do the original colors not want to print in a legible way, but we lost the original art somewhere. And we are having troubles with Great Beard colors. Colors are just difficult. But they are not in the scrap bin just yet.
However, there is another mini comic in the works – just needs layout and printing – calledDelicate Souffle. And I thumbnailed my longest story yet, working title of COB, that is about 108 pages. This will hopefully be completed by the end of 2013, so it should be an exciting year here. Look for an announcement of chapter 1 in March, hopefully.
I started my own web comic, Spaz Hands, for autobio, which is a genre I am extremely fond of.  And The Jerks went to full color with the marvelous talents of Abe.
On the show front, we did great. We had a booth at 5 conventions and I hosted an art show with my mom, Ink Tub Art Show. We got to walk around at Stumptown Comic Fest in Portland where we met Shing Khor in person (Marlowe the Monster) and said hi to Liz Conley, who we met the previous year at Stumptown.
One of the biggest things of 2012, Abe graduated from Seattle Central Community College with a certificate in Publishing Arts and now works at Minuteman Press. He is busy, but doing great and loving it.
In addition to completing COB in 2013, we, as last year, plan to blog more. And more interesting. This of course seems feasible after a week where neither of us had to go to work. I haven’t even left the house since Wednesday. But we have a plan and a list. Hopefully this pans out.
I would also like to introduce our new team. Some of us you already know.
Angela-Founder-web
Angela (that’s me) is the artist behind everything we do. She writes, she draws, she makes everyone (Abe) work really hard.
Abe-Founder-web
Abe is the head of IT, PR, Prepress, and Customer Service. Quite a big hat. He wears it well. He can be a bit of a downer but is good enough at what he does that it doesn’t really matter.
Walter-IT-web
Walter takes care of our website and computing needs as directed by Abe. He likes sulking and the most we know about him is his headphones have skulls on them.
Pamela-AD-web
Pamela is responsible for all artistic decisions. In her spare time, Pamela is an enthusiastic, if confused, soccer player.
Susie-PR-web
Susie is the only extrovert here and thus is responsible for letting you know when awesome things happen and developing relationships with people outside of our office (living room). Pamela is her twin sister. Susie hates soccer.
Bret-CS-web
Bret takes care of your purchasing needs. Though he has been out of the frat for a while, due to an unfortunate misunderstanding according to him, he still has the frat mentality and will frequently shout “Chug, chug, chug” whenever anyone drinks anything. Ever.
Milton-Owner-web
Milton is our curmudgeonly owner. We tried to get him to retire, but he would miss grumping about the office too much.
Constanec-Prepress-web
Constance takes care of all our digitizing and layout needs. No one knows much about Constance. We had to tape her picture to the back of her monitors to remember what she looks like.






Friday, December 28, 2012

Happy Cthulhu Krismas


Belated Happy Krismas from the team at Flying Dodo Publications (that’d be Abe and Angela and all the dodos).  Here’s a black and white version you can print for yourself on a legal-sized paper (8.5×14).
Page1-web







Page2-web









Page3-web

















Page4-web


Page5-web
And here is our Krismas card!
XMasCard-web

Friday, November 16, 2012

Ink Tub Show


We will be at Egress Studio this Saturday from 2-8. It is in Bellingham, so if you are in the area, I hope we see you.
We will have all sorts of stuff for sale.All our prints and comics. Even Abe will have some photos for sale (they are beautiful by the way). And Anita will have a bunch of stuff – poetry, prints, original art, cards. Great stuff. We are thinking, we might even sell some Jerks originals.
We will also have a raffle. $1 is one chance to win a set of cards from Anita of the Humane Society Dogs or Cats. And you will definitely get to pick one of four postcards that I drew. Proceeds of the raffle will be donated to the local Humane Society near Egress Studio, so the post cards have an animal theme.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Short-run 2012 walkabout



We had a great time this weekending wandering around Short Run Small Press Fest. We were broke so we decided to see if people would trade. People were really nice about it. We traded some great stuff. I hope they felt it was worth it, too.
I think the most beautiful thing we found was the screen printer, Tory Franklin. She has an amazing screen-printed bestiary book bound in fake crocodile skin. The screen printing was done in gold and black, and metallic ink is notoriously difficult to screen print with. She did an amazing job. She was kind enough to trade An extensive and practical guide to protecting your chickens from coyotes for her book on lycanthropic folks, Les unfortunates, Vol 1: Origins of Society’s Lycanthropy, another beautifully screen printed book. Olive green paper with yellow ink on the cover. So gorgeous. She also told us a bit about Vera Project’s screen printing and sent us off to talk to the actual people that run it. Abe is really excited now, so expect some screen printing in our future.
Aron Nels Steinke does kids books that look adorable (like The super-duper dog park andThe crazy cat lady dance), has an autobio that I want to get (Big Plans), and has a new comic online called Mr. Wolf. He is a teacher, grade school I think, so I bet his kids books are great. We couldn’t get anything at the time, but possible Xmas gifts this year!
And just down from him was another teacher, Nicole J Georges! Grammar and writing, it seemed. She also has a memoir coming out Jan 22 and is doing a reading on Jan 30 at Elliot Bay Books that I would love to go to. We got her mini comic, Invincible Summer #21 ~ Clutch #24, and it was quite funny. She does it with her friend, Clutch McB, and they each document each day for a couple weeks or so.  Looking at her site, it seems Invincible summer has been collected into two volumes, so Drat! I have to go get those now too! Nicole happens to be very funny and made me laugh out loud several times. This bodes well for her graphic novel in January. I also got a 2013 calendar from her for my work desk. Adopted animals (she is also a pet portraitist). So great. I can’t wait to look at it all next year. She also mentions whales, XX.
We checked out Chelsea Baker, who we have seen at other cons. Abe got to talk with her for a while at the Portland Zine Symposium. When I went back to Nicole’s booth to get the calendar, Abe went back to Chelsea and got a preview of a book she is doing about her sister, Moira (also the title of the book it seems), who has down syndrome. Looks like a good book and has sciency stuff, which Abe loves.
Then we stopped by Breanne Bolands’s booth. She wasn’t so much comics, but a very funny writer. She also made me laugh out loud. I traded two comics for two zines with her, including Tighty-whities and their men, which made me happy. I got How to be more creative more often, even if you have a job, responsibilities, and need more than three hours of sleep a night. Quite enjoyable actually, and I think I will flip through it again when I am feeling uncreative. Here is my favorite quote. “Your dream is your cub and you are a mama bear. Find what threatens it and eviscerate it.” But then there was  a tiny zine called A selection of surreal moments from my recent vacation, which cracked me up. Tiny little stories with an illustration. Great way to commemorate a trip. I just loved it. I will be checking her store when I have disposable income again.
I got a little mini comic by Colleen Frakes called Sketchbook Follies #2 and it made me laugh right out loud. And I am so jealous because she got to go to the Comic Workshop in Vermont at the Center for Cartoon Studies.
Oh man. That isn’t even everything. Almost. Sorry. I just get so excited.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Bellingham ComiCon 2012 wrap up


We survived Bellingham ComiCon. It was quite a turn out. Way busier than last year and I believe busier than Jet City Comic Show. It was exhausting and fun. I love meeting all those people. Abe went even though he had a sinus infection. What a stud.
Angela at the booth





If you are from Whatcom County, and I hope we have some new readers from there, you might have seen some images on the Bellingham Herald’s Take 5 that are pretty familiar in these parts. Yes, Angela’s art was featured on the cover. Pretty thrilling.
Angela drawing





Angela, of course, made tons of little drawings again. People seem to enjoy them and they are fun to make. So they will likely be at all future cons for $2. You can always tell who the Doctor Who fans are because they call them adipose, but I really did start drawing these before I saw that adorably creepy episode.
Mini drawings






More mini drawings







If you are in Whatcom County and just can’t get enough of us, we will be up again on Saturday, November 17 for an art show at Egress Studio from 1-7 at 5581 Noon Rd, just outside Bellingham. And if you stay in the area, on Sunday, Abe and Angela will be teaching a workshop on comics collaboration for $35. We’ll show how we collaborate. Then attendees will get to practice collaboration together and hopefully walk out with a minicomic. Email Abe at abe@flyingdodopublications.com or Angela at angela@flyingdodopublications.com or Anita of Egress Studio at akboyle@egressstudio.com. Hope to see you there!