Sunday, September 10, 2006

September 11th, 2001 from the Brooklyn Promenade

I know I haven't posted on this blog in ages, and I promise I will soon. But before I do I want to let you all know that I have posted the photos I took from the Brooklyn Promenade when the Twin Towers were attacked. I've posted an account with some photos here and a Flickr set with all the photos here.

Monday, June 05, 2006



I'm very glad to see that the DVD set for the Venture Bros. Season One has been released. I've been very fortunate to have had the opportunity to work on this excellent show. It's not often I get a chance to work on a really great project and I really do think it's in a class all it's own. Jackson Publick and Doc Hammer are some of the sharpest writers in the business right now, and Chris McCulloch's snappy direction always pushes the envelope.

If you aren't familiar with the show (which, considering you are at my well hidden blog, I doubt) then I highly recommend you navigate on over to Amazon and git yerself one.

Friday, March 24, 2006

Mom's 60th birthday

A while back I made a short film celebrating my mother's birthday. My sister and I scanned over 600 photographs from the family albums. I rotated and scaled each one so that Mom's head was the central point of the frame, then played them in sequence.



YouTube really compressed the hell out of it, which kills quite a bit of the impact.

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Mr. UFO



Slow week. Here's a doodle. I might do something with this guy...

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Kong

We were discussing a King Kong project at work the other day and during the meeting I drew this Kong. This is drawn with a real stumpy pencil- not the virtual one I posted a few days ago.

Prairie Belt Sausage

My local grocery store, The Four Season's at C-Town (and yes, the bizarre grammar is verbatim), sometimes stocks items that just feel like they come from a different time and place. Occasionally I buy them simply because they are too interesting to pass up. This past weekend I came upon this wonderful can of Prairie Belt Smoked Sausages.


So wonderful. The hearty innocent american child so happy with his plate of tiny sausages. The illustration looks like it was painted in the 50's.


Turning the can around reveals some oddly specific ingredients. Mechanically Separated Chicken!? Mmmmmmm. Do I really need to know that the meat was handled by machines? It gets better: Chicken Skins, Pork Skins... Pork Spleens... Pork Stomachs.. Couldn't they just say "Pork" and be done with it? I haven't actually opened the can yet.

Stumpy Pencil Photoshop Brush



Beyond a doubt, my favorite drawing implement is a cheap number 2 pencil - hand shaved with a sharp blade so the pencil tip is stumpy and irregular. It creates a beautiful line – fat or thin with a simple twist of the pencil... light or dark with the slightest variation in pressure… and it’s so soft it hardly takes anything to get a mark on the page. It’s like a seamless progression from brain to paper. And when you sharpen the pencil with a blade, it lasts seemingly forever! Pencil sharpeners, particularly the mechanical kind, devour pencils.

Recreating the experience of a cheap number 2 pencil on the computer has been a bit of a Holy Grail for me. I have built a Photoshop brush that gets some of it right. It has a nice grain quality, it’s fast and fun to use. Of course it’s missing the tactile sensation of rubbing graphite against paper grain. And Photoshop doesn’t give the right options to do the variety of line. But after a lot of experimentation I think it’s close.

I’m not going to talk about the cost differential between the two instruments.

Get it here: (this tool has been updated and is now available from this post)

Import this tool from the Photoshop Tools palette. I made it on CS2, but it might work in CS1, or even earlier.

Here's a Frankenstein drawing I made in Photoshop with the Stumpy Pencil.


Awww, he's so sad.

Click the image to get a higher rez version. It shows the "grain" a little better.

Here's another brush I built recently. It's a high contrast grainy brush which I have become kind of addicted to. It's fast and sometimes a bit unpredictable, particularly when turning corners. It creates a nice rough line that tapers nicely. It's just fun to use. Thus the name.

Here tis: Fun_Sketchin_Brush.zip http://www.monkeysuit.com/Fun_Sketchin_Brush.zip


Here is a celebration of my new Fun Sketchin' Brush



Well the line quality doesn't really come through at this size. Click the image to see a higher-rez version. Or just download the brush and try it for yourself.

-mike