Roger Langridge's Blog, page 251
October 11, 2013
Little Awful Ernie
So it looks like this has been officially announced: I'm writing and drawing a one-shot kids' comic for Dynamite based on their Evil Ernie franchise. It's called "Little Awful Ernie" (at least it is inside; I think it's just "Li'l Ernie" on the cover) and you can read more about it here. In the meantime, here's a panel I like.

Published on October 11, 2013 13:49
October 10, 2013
A Thing (or three)
Published on October 10, 2013 10:00
October 9, 2013
Neslo Ymmij
The first issue of Jimmy Olsen I ever read was this one - my brother found it in a second-hand bookshop in New Zealand, a real rarity at the time because the American editions usually never got down to that part of the world (we had to be content with black-and-white Australian reprints). It was about Jimmy becoming a fifth-dimensional imp like Mr Mxyzptlk, and the only way Superman could sort it out was by getting him to say "Neslo Ymmij" - his name backwards, of course - except it didn't work, for reasons which I now can't remember. Anyway, my brother and I called Jimmy "Neslo Ymmij" for years afterwards. In fact, we still do.
You may call him Jimmy... but he'll always be Neslo to me.
You may call him Jimmy... but he'll always be Neslo to me.

Published on October 09, 2013 13:26
October 8, 2013
Thaddeus Bodog Sivana
Published on October 08, 2013 13:33
October 7, 2013
Pencil Detail
Published on October 07, 2013 12:58
October 6, 2013
October 5, 2013
More Character Sketches
Published on October 05, 2013 13:46
October 4, 2013
Character Sketches
Published on October 04, 2013 10:00
October 3, 2013
Drawing Under Pressure
A few thoughts inspired by Cameron Stewart's smart, sensible decision not to draw other people's characters at conventions (details here) – which, I should say up front, I respect enormously.
I think it's entirely right and proper that Cameron doesn't draw stuff he finds a chore. As he points out, it's bad for the person receiving the sketch, it's bad for him at the time and it's possibly even bad for his career.
But me? I really enjoy it.
I haven't always. The first few shows where I did sketches for people I found the whole process really intimidating. For years I didn't charge anything, even if my immediate table-neighbour was charging (and I made no friends that way, I can tell you!), because I felt like it wouldn't be right to charge for a substandard drawing. (Even now I always have a "freebie" tier, because a big part of my audience is kids.)
But somewhere along the line I stopped thinking of convention sketches as substandard finished drawings and started to think of them as a kind of performance. It's a bit like improv theatre. You're given a set of parameters, someone says "go", and you have to see what you can come up with. Once I started to think of it like that, convention sketches suddenly became a lot of fun. And once I started having fun, the sketches themselves became a whole lot better, too.
There are things I don't like drawing, to be sure. Here are a few of them:
• Drawing someone's own character from their self-published comic (or sometimes not even that, just a character sheet) can be a bit of a drag, because I've got no investment in the character – especially if the design is especially complicated (which is another word for "bad" where character design is concerned).
• Drawing portraits of real people while they stand in front of me and wait is seldom fun, mainly because I'm terrible at it.
• Characters I have no familiarity with (I've read virtually no Marvel or DC comics in 20 years, I haven't seen Star Wars since 1977, I've seen almost none of the big superhero movies and I hardly watch TV) that I'm expected to know every detail of – or busk through with poor reference, usually from a tiny iPhone image – can be something of a chore.
• Wolverine can take a flying leap at himself; I find him an utterly repellant character on every level.
I sometimes do these things anyway, because that's kind of what I'm there for. Those kinds of drawings tend to be a small minority of what I'm asked to do, so I choke it down and try to be nice about it.
But most of the time it's a blast.
Things I don't mind sketching:
• Popeye (and related characters)
• Muppets
• Other people's characters which I've actually worked on (I've never quite understood why anybody would want me to draw something I have no association with)
• Superheroes or other famous pop-cultural icons, if I'm allowed to make them my own and/or ridicule them (playing them straight is dull, dull, dull!)
Things I especially like sketching:
• Anything funny/out of the ordinary
• My own characters!
That last one is especially important, because it's what every cartoonist wants to be recognised for in the end: the fruits of their own imaginations, rather than work they did filling in for a dead guy. If you like to collect drawings at conventions and you really want to get a great sketch, then ask a cartoonist to draw a character they actually created themselves. You're virtually guaranteed to get the best they're capable of.

Published on October 03, 2013 10:00
October 2, 2013
Popped
Here's a drawing I did for an auction to raise funds for my son's school.
It's been a crazy couple of weeks on the work front! After a few months of very little activity indeed, things have finally picked up again... in a big way, too. I hope to be able to announce one or two things before very long; in the meantime, I'll just say I've got four distinct projects on the go, plus one or two long-term maybes I've had dangling out there for a while that may yet blossom into something. Oh, and I just drew a 12-page comic for my son's birthday later this month (shh!).
This is the wacky life of the freelancer, I'm afraid – you're either starving or snowed under. I'd rather be too busy than not busy enough, so I'm not complaining...
Not yet, anyway.

It's been a crazy couple of weeks on the work front! After a few months of very little activity indeed, things have finally picked up again... in a big way, too. I hope to be able to announce one or two things before very long; in the meantime, I'll just say I've got four distinct projects on the go, plus one or two long-term maybes I've had dangling out there for a while that may yet blossom into something. Oh, and I just drew a 12-page comic for my son's birthday later this month (shh!).
This is the wacky life of the freelancer, I'm afraid – you're either starving or snowed under. I'd rather be too busy than not busy enough, so I'm not complaining...
Not yet, anyway.
Published on October 02, 2013 10:00