Thursday, February 27, 2014

Bill Waterson Returns! sort of...

'Calvin and Hobbes' creator Bill Watterson does first public cartoon in almost 2 decades


Cartoonist Bill Watterson created the cover art for comics film documentary, Stripped, on Wednesday, the first cartoon art the artist has released publicly since retiring the Calvin and Hobbes comic strip in 1995.

Stripped will be available on iTunes April 1. Read more and watch a trailer here:

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Evans, Hasen and Moldoff Enter the Eisner Hall of Fame

The Eisner Awards


The Eisner Awards judges have selected publisher Orrin C. Evans and Golden Age artists Irwin Hasen and Sheldon Moldoff for induction this summer into the Will Eisner Comic Awards Hall of Fame.


The late  Orrin C. Evans edited and published the first all-black comic book, 1947′s All-Negro Comics. 

Irwin Hasen, who created the comic strip Dondi with Gus Edson, drew the Golden Age adventures of such heroes as Green Lantern, Wildcat, the Flash and the Justice Society.

The late Sheldon Moldoff co-created Batman characters Poison Ivy, Mr. Freeze, Bat-Mite and the original Batwoman and Bat-Girl. He also created one of my personal favorites, Sugar and Spike; which I think inspired Nickelodeon’s Rugrats.




Get more info at The Beat.

Remember... Just Create!

Friday, February 7, 2014

Submit art now for the Comic-Con International 2014 Souvenir Book!

Get your creative juices flowing.



Find out more information here

The deadline for submissions is April 25, 2014. Read all about it—and get the Submissions Form download.

As I always say... Just Create!

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

The Business of the Comic Book Industry

I feel I've covered what you need to know about the business. If I missed something you want to know about. Please comment below and I'll get a blog post done for your answer.

Here's what I've covered:
Do You Want to Sell Merchandise With Celebrity Images?

How much do you get paid?

Top Ten Artistic Talent Scale

So You Want to Collaborate on a Comic Book or Graphic Novel?

Words and Art - Comic Book Readers and Creators

Pay the Talent!

Back-end Deal, My Ass!

So You Want to Self-Publish Your Comic Book or Graphic Novel

What are the Page Rates to do Comic Books?

Royalties and Profits in Comic Books and Graphic Novels - The Back End Deal

Comic Book Cog in the Wheel

No Money to Create your Comic Book or Graphic Novel?

Work For Hire - Good or Bad?

Where do I find an artist?

Writer Placing Ads for Comic Book Artists - What Works?

Starving Artists Will Do Anything for Cheap! - A Cautionary Tale

I'll leave you with this quote from an open letter to young freelancers by Mark Waid. I feel it's good information for everyone. You can read the entire letter here.

Be professional. Be a problem-solver. Be willing to compromise in the face of a solid argument.  Be willing to lose sometimes because you’ll learn more that way than you will by always winning. Ultimately, if a client is paying you for your services, he or she has every right to set the specifications, just as you have a right to your integrity. But when people jealous of how you make a living try to rag you with that old truism that every company employee has to eat shit now and then, remind them that you are not an employee. You’re a contractor. You do not receive health benefits, sick days, pensions, vacation time, or any of the other considerations traditional employees receive. Your clients have zero ethical or moral ground to lie to you, to denigrate you, to cheat you, to demand more from you than they’re paying for, to unapologetically walk back on promises or treat you maliciously, or to exploit your need to put food on the table. The good ones won’t. Never trust the bad ones.

read next - Kickstarter is Not for the Meek
previous - Starving Artists Will Do Anything for Cheap! - A Cautionary Tale

Keep reading and follow me. If you have found this helpful, please let me know and share with other creators. Are the explanations clear and complete? Feel free to ask me questions.

Remember… Just Create!

If you are interested in further expanding your knowledge, then I recommend these books.

You can support this blog when you purchase a book by clicking the link below, I get a piece of the action and helps me to continue doing this blog. Support an artist today.

copyright 2014 H. Simpson 

Monday, January 27, 2014

Comic Con’s Clydene Nee Needs Your Help



Clydene Nee is one of the first people I met at San Diego Comic Con. She is one of the kindest people I have ever known. She is the heart and soul of Artist Alley and it’s most fervent defender. She has helped many artists.

Now she needs help. Clydene needs a new kidney to survive and is undergoing dialysis. Her medical bills are skyrocketing! Artist Mark Brooks and his wife took the initiative to set up an online fundraiser for Clydene. The creative community should thank them for doing so.

Here is the fund-raising link. http://www.gofundme.com/67bolc

Please repost. Spread the word.

#helpClydeneNee

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Starving Artists Will Do Anything for Cheap! - A Cautionary Tale

Don’t accept the “I have no money routine.” at face value.
Starving Artist © 2014 H. Simpson

Below I’m sharing a letter to a prospective client, after I responded to an ad to do a financial comic strip weekly (about 4 panels) and spoke to him on the phone.

Hi Edward,
        I have some concerns and reservations. 
        Something bothered me after our last phone call. I had already checked to find info about your company, to no avail. Not unusual for a start-up. I also used Whois to see who owned the web-site. That normally shows me who owns it. Oddly, that was a dead end also. Okay, maybe they have a lot of sites and purchased domains in a group. 
        After we talked, I dug some more and found out you and David Travers work for Rustic Canyon - a venture capital firm that invests in entrepreneurs and the company focuses on Internet and Digital Media.
        If I walked into the Rustic Canyon offices with a proposal/business plan for starting a web site featuring financial comics and my pitch included paying standard fees for PR and marketing, web development and printing. And paying the comic creators $10 for the content being provided. What would the reaction of any venture capital company be? I can imagine the questions; Why aren't you investing more in your product? This is the core of your business, why are you short changing yourself? If I answered, “Because the artists can be gotten cheaply.” If I wasn't laughed at outright, I'm sure my proposal would be denied for trying to shortcut the product among other reasons. What’s going to stop a monster financial company in your space from copying you? They can pay your artists  a living wage with merits and steal them right out from under you. 
        I don't mind cutting my rates for a start-up company and getting in on the ground floor of a project I can get excited about; which I thought was the case here, since I feel that they are working hard and struggling to bring the idea to market and reality.
But I feel you guys are getting paid to do this, you have no skin in the game. Rustic Canyon has the ability to fully fund this. I find it hard to believe you guys can't get Rustic to fully fund this. It's insulting knowing that you only want to offer the artist a rate below minimum wage for their time and talent when I feel you guys can pay a good rate upfront and include a merit structure.  Ask the PR and Marketing company to accept a pay rate of $10 a  campaign and they’ll get more later if the campaign is successful. I sure they would laugh at the idea. But nooooo, your business plans includes $20 million for PR and a pittance for the creators the content.   
        How can you ask me to take time out of my day to put towards this and you guys are sitting snug and secure because you do this everyday. I feel like you guys are taking advantage of artists because you can. Because we really will work for just the love of it and do our best job every time. 

        What is your response to the issues I've raised?

I never heard from him again.

read next - The Business of the Comic Book Industry
previous - Writer Placing Ads for Comic Book Artists - What Works?

Keep reading and follow me. If you have found this helpful, please let me know and share with other creators. Are the explanations clear and complete? Feel free to ask me questions.

Remember… Just Create!

If you are interested in further expanding your knowledge, then I recommend these books.

You can support this blog when you purchase a book by clicking the link below, I get a piece of the action and helps me to continue doing this blog. Support an artist today.

copyright 2014 H. Simpson